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Climate assemblies can help unlock more effective action against climate change, but improvements are needed in how they are run.

For the European Union to become a global player without Britain, there must be a major shift of alliances and direction inside the bloc.

Boris Johnson’s sweeping election victory brings clarity for Britain but not for Europe as it enters a decade of major geostrategic shifts.

Unlike most of its neighbors, France does not want to allow the UK more time to leave the EU. But this is not about schadenfreude—the French position is based upon genuine angst.

The EU’s most important leaders are hobbled by domestic crises, leaving the bloc almost rudderless to deal with major foreign and security policy issues.

Europe needs more military cooperation between London and Paris. Yet the prospects for significant joint action in the future appear slim.

While Britain’s prime minister ushers in the decline of London’s influence in the world, France’s president seeks reforms that will reassert Paris’s role in the EU.

The 1956 Suez Crisis created a rift between London and Paris that has hampered European defense ever since.

European defense cooperation is being spurred more by the convergence of national priorities than by the efforts of institutions like the EU and NATO.

A selection of experts answer a new question from Judy Dempsey on the foreign and security policy challenges shaping Europe’s role in the world.