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Engage in Global Conversations: Great Decisions Returns to Lake Travis Library

The Lake Travis Community Library announces the return of its popular Great Decisions program for its seventh year. This free, in-person series, sponsored by the Foreign Policy Association, offers community members an opportunity to delve into critical international issues.

Starting March 13th and continuing through June 19th, 2025, the program will convene on alternating Thursday evenings at 7:00 PM in the library’s meeting room. No registration is required, making it accessible to all interested participants.

Great Decisions, a nationwide initiative with over 50 years of history, aims to foster public understanding and engagement in foreign affairs. The Lake Travis Community Library is proud to facilitate this vital program, providing a platform for informed dialogue.

This year’s series will explore eight carefully selected topics. Each session will commence with a video presentation that outlines the evening’s focal issue. For those who wish to prepare, the Foreign Policy Association offers a Great Decisions Briefing Book containing relevant articles. Following the video, a knowledgeable facilitator will offer insights and guide a thoughtful discussion, encouraging participants to share their perspectives.

The Great Decisions program at the Lake Travis Community Library provides a valuable opportunity for individuals to expand their knowledge of global affairs and engage in meaningful conversations with fellow community members.

2025 Topics

America at a Global Crossroads
Thursday, March 13 at 7pm
Facilitated by Rodger Baker

The U.S., polarized and divided, faces a world overflowing with challenges, dangers, and uncertainties. Conflict and disorder have become the defining features of world politics.

The Evolution of U.S. Leadership in the Global Economy: Dilemmas and Choices
Thursday, March 27 at 7pm

Facilitated by Rachel Wellhausen

Over the past two presidential terms, the U.S. has strongly pivoted away from neoliberalism as a foreign economic policy approach.

Competition, Cold War, or Conflict? Navigating U.S.-China Relations in Tense Times
Thursday, April 10 at 7pm

Facilitated by Zhizhen Lu

There is one thing that people can actually agree on across the aisle in Washington, DC: The United States is in a strategic competition with a rising China that poses a range of economic, political, and military security challenges.

India: Between China, the West, and the Global South
Thursday, April 24 at 7pm
Facilitated by Rodger Baker

As the Republic of India marks its 75th anniversary in January 2025, the world’s most populous nation and largest democracy continues to defy simple categorization.

International Climate Cooperation in an Era of Geopolitical Turmoil
Thursday, May 8 at 7pm

Facilitated by Michael Mosser

Over the past 30 years, climate change has become one of the central global challenges of the modern era, one that has hugely important consequences for the livability of the planet.

The Future of NATO and European Security
Thursday, May 22 at 7pm

Europe is frightened and frightening for the first time really since the 1980s, when nuclear sabers were rattling as the Soviet Union and the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) both deployed contending intermediate range missiles along the dividing line of the military alliances. With Russia’s continued barbarity in Ukraine there is no escaping that Vladimir Putin intends not to be “European.”

AI and American National Security
Thursday, June 5 at 7pm
Facilitated by Matthew Bey

Artificial intelligence (AI), especially generative AI, is often claimed as an emerging technology that will disrupt all facets of society.

American Policy in the Middle East: Taking Stock and Looking Ahead
Thursday, June 19 at 7pm

Facilitated by Matthew Bey

Analysts of American policy in 2025 have the unusual advantage of being able to assess the new president’s likely policies against the backdrop of what he did in his first term, four years earlier.