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Benjamin Press
Nonresident Research Analyst, Democracy, Conflict, and Governance Program

about


Benjamin Press is no longer with the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.

Benjamin Press was a nonresident research analyst in the Democracy, Conflict, and Governance Program at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.

His research focuses on international politics and U.S. foreign policy, especially as it relates to support for democracy and human rights. He has authored or co-authored articles on political polarization, global protests, and U.S. democracy policy in multiple outlets, including The World Politics Review, Just Security, and the SAIS Review of International Affairs. He also runs the Carnegie Endowment’s Global Protest Tracker.

Press was formerly a James C. Gaither Junior Fellow in the Democracy, Conflict, and Governance Program at Carnegie. He holds an A.B. in History from Princeton University. 


All work from Benjamin Press

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14 Results
commentary
Climate Protest Tracker

A one-stop source for following global trends in climate policy protests since 2022.

commentary
Climate Protests: Tracking Growing Unrest

As climate politics become more salient, demonstrations will likely multiply and expand in influence.

· January 12, 2023
paper
Understanding and Responding to Global Democratic Backsliding

As the world faces a democratic recession, many of the most common explanations fall short. But looking more closely at antidemocratic leaders’ motivations and methods reveals valuable insights about different types of backsliding and how international actors should respond.

· October 20, 2022
In The Media
in the media
Stop Projecting America’s Democratic Decline Onto the World

While the adage that “misery loves company” is understandable as an emotional response, it is not a helpful approach to analyzing global politics. Overestimating the similarities between U.S. political dynamics and those of other troubled democracies distorts our understanding of democratic backsliding—and makes it more difficult to fight.

· October 18, 2022
In The Media
in the media
Why Protests Evolve—or Don’t—in the Middle East, Europe, and North America

Over the past fifteen years, no regions have been more affected by the rising tide of global protest than the Middle East and North Africa, on the one hand, and Europe and North America, on the other.

paper
Reducing Pernicious Polarization: A Comparative Historical Analysis of Depolarization

To better understand the various paths by which societies might overcome or reduce political divisions, this working paper examines perniciously polarized countries that have successfully depolarized, at least for a time.

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· May 5, 2022
article
What Happens When Democracies Become Perniciously Polarized?

The United States’ democracy is being threatened by increasingly polarized politics. Other countries’ histories offer warnings and suggest possible solutions.

· January 18, 2022
commentary
The Four Dynamics That Drove Protests in 2021

Despite their geographic diversity, the uprisings shared similar root causes.

· January 13, 2022
REQUIRED IMAGE
In the Media
When US Security and Democracy Interests Clash

By heeding lessons from past experience, Washington will have a better chance of crafting policies that fulfill both the administration’s aspiration to upgrade U.S. support for democracy and rights globally alongside its determination to preserve and, in some cases, expand important U.S. security partnerships.

· November 18, 2021
Just Security
paper
Navigating the Democracy-Security Dilemma in U.S. Foreign Policy: Lessons from Egypt, India, and Turkey

This paper looks in depth at the democracy-security dilemma with a view to helping U.S. policymakers deal with it more systematically and effectively. Case studies of U.S. policy toward Egypt, India, and Turkey over the past twenty years highlight the complexity of the democracy-security dilemma.

· November 4, 2021