Foreign Policy

Foreign Policy
Editor in Chief Susan Glasser
Categories News magazine
Frequency Bimonthly
Circulation 108,479 (Dec 09)
Publisher The Washington Post Company
Country  United States
Language English
Website foreignpolicy.com
ISSN 00157228

Foreign Policy is a bimonthly American magazine founded in 1970 by Samuel P. Huntington and Warren Demian Manshel.

Originally, the magazine was a quarterly. Its most notable feature was its unusual physical format: pages printed in a narrow 4" x 11" size, with a durable yet not hardback cover.

Under editor-in-chief Moisés Naím (1996–2010), Foreign Policy changed from an academic quarterly in the 1990s to a bimonthly glossy, winning the 2009, 2007, and 2003 National Magazine Award for General Excellence. The topics it covers include global politics, economics, integration and ideas. On September 29, 2008, The Washington Post Company announced that they had purchased Foreign Policy from the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.[1] It also has a website.[2]

Foreign Policy's contributors include: Pulitzer Prize-winning military reporter Tom Ricks, international bestseller Stephen Walt, blogger Daniel W. Drezner, Christian Brose (Condoleezza Rice's longtime chief speechwriter), 9/11 Commission director Philip Zelikow, ex-senior White House aide Peter Feaver, top Pentagon official Dov Zakheim, John McCain's foreign policy adviser Steve Biegun, and Josh Rogin (a Washington journalist specializing in investigative reports on national security and foreign affairs).

Foreign Policy publishes the annual Globalization Index, and Failed State Index. Its report Inside the Ivory Tower provides an annual comprehensive ranking of professional schools in international relations.

A Spanish edition of Foreign Policy, named Foreign Policy en español is published by Fundación para las Relaciones Internacionales y el Diálogo Exterior (FRIDE) since 2004.

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