Foreign Policy
Foreign Policy is an American magazine specializing in global affairs, international relations, economics, and ideas, founded in 1970 by Harvard professor Samuel P. Huntington and Warren Demian Manshel to challenge prevailing orthodoxies in U.S. foreign policy discourse during the Vietnam War era.[1][2]
Published quarterly in print with daily online articles and multimedia content, it is owned by Graham Holdings Company since 2013 and headquartered in Washington, D.C., under editor-in-chief Ravi Agrawal.[2][3]
The publication has earned multiple National Magazine Awards for general excellence and digital reporting, establishing its influence among policymakers and analysts through rigorous, debate-oriented journalism.[2]
Notable for evolving from a niche quarterly to a glossy, globally distributed outlet in the early 2000s, Foreign Policy has shaped discussions on topics from great-power competition to economic interdependence, though its proximity to establishment views in U.S. foreign policy institutions invites scrutiny for potential alignment with interventionist paradigms over empirical skepticism of long-term outcomes.[2][1][4]