The Harvard Colloquium on International Affairs is a University-wide
initiative to focus a wide range of perspectives and expertise on
major issues in contemporary international life. Last year's inaugural
Colloquium focused on the tenth anniversary of the fall of the Berlin
Wall, with General Brent Scowcroft and former Russian Foreign Minister
Andrei Kozyrev ably serving as keynote speakers. For the beginning
of both a new century and a new administration, the 2001 Colloquium
addressed a topic of equal importance: "A New American Foreign
Policy? Global Voices, Challenges, and Opportunities." The Colloquium
began with a presentation by the U.S. Commission on National Security/21st
Century, and featured a Keynote Address by Dr. Jorge Castañeda,
Mexico's Secretary of Foreign Affairs.
Taking place less than four months after President George W. Bush
took the oath of office, the 2001 Colloquium focused on the foreign
policy challenges and opportunities of the dawning century. It provided
a unique forum for foreign policy decision-makers to discuss issues
and policies with officials from foreign governments and international
institutions, academics, journalists, corporate and NGO leaders, and
other experts from the United States and abroad. Over a dozen different
programs and centers at Harvard sponsored panels focusing on the regions
and topics most important to American foreign policy; panelists discussed
everything from nuclear strategy to building domestic constituencies.
For more information and archived video files, please visit http://www.wcfia.harvard.edu/colloquium.