Beyond the Scoop: A Harriman Magazine Podcast

Episode 2: Ambassador Sarah Mendelson Explains Why the U.S. Needs to Fix Its Own Democracy Before Promoting it Abroad

15 min · 10 de mar de 2026
Portada del episodio Episode 2: Ambassador Sarah Mendelson Explains Why the U.S. Needs to Fix Its Own Democracy Before Promoting it Abroad

Descripción

Ambassador Sarah Mendelson [https://www.heinz.cmu.edu/faculty-research/profiles/mendelson-sarah] (Ph.D., Political Science, GSAS ‘93) has been working in democracy and human rights promotion for decades, including posts in the Obama Administration, first leading USAID’s democracy, human rights and governance work and later as U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Economic and Social Council. Mendelson has long noticed cracks in the field of international democracy promotion, particularly in the United States. In this episode, she discusses the problems in the field, why we need new approaches to human rights and development, and how she hopes to implement these approaches through a Carnegie Mellon initiative called Sustainable Futures [https://www.library.cmu.edu/sustainable-futures]. The project, in the pilot stages in Pittsburgh, is based on the United Nations’ Sustainable Development Goals framework. It uses AI to collect data on the most pressing local issues and brings these issues to the attention of local representatives. If successful, Mendelson hopes it can serve as a model for global development.

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7 episodios

episode Episode 2: Ambassador Sarah Mendelson Explains Why the U.S. Needs to Fix Its Own Democracy Before Promoting it Abroad artwork

Episode 2: Ambassador Sarah Mendelson Explains Why the U.S. Needs to Fix Its Own Democracy Before Promoting it Abroad

Ambassador Sarah Mendelson [https://www.heinz.cmu.edu/faculty-research/profiles/mendelson-sarah] (Ph.D., Political Science, GSAS ‘93) has been working in democracy and human rights promotion for decades, including posts in the Obama Administration, first leading USAID’s democracy, human rights and governance work and later as U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Economic and Social Council. Mendelson has long noticed cracks in the field of international democracy promotion, particularly in the United States. In this episode, she discusses the problems in the field, why we need new approaches to human rights and development, and how she hopes to implement these approaches through a Carnegie Mellon initiative called Sustainable Futures [https://www.library.cmu.edu/sustainable-futures]. The project, in the pilot stages in Pittsburgh, is based on the United Nations’ Sustainable Development Goals framework. It uses AI to collect data on the most pressing local issues and brings these issues to the attention of local representatives. If successful, Mendelson hopes it can serve as a model for global development.

10 de mar de 202615 min
episode Episode 1: The End of U.S. Soft Power? An Interview with Timothy Frye artwork

Episode 1: The End of U.S. Soft Power? An Interview with Timothy Frye

In the first episode of Beyond the Scoop, Season 2, editor Masha Udensiva-Brenner interviews political scientist, and former Harriman Institute director Timothy Frye about his essay in the 2026 issue of Harriman Magazine, which tracks the evolution of U.S. soft power through Frye's personal experiences working on soft power projects.    Frye discusses his time as a young guide working for a U.S. Information Agency traveling exhibit in the late Soviet Union, and his thoughts on the current state of U.S. soft power, an element of U.S. foreign policy that enjoyed bipartisan support for decades until the Trump administration dismantled most of the programs that brought American aid and American culture to the rest of the world.

9 de feb de 202621 min
episode The Rise and Fall of U.S. International Broadcasting: An Interview With Jeffrey Trimble artwork

The Rise and Fall of U.S. International Broadcasting: An Interview With Jeffrey Trimble

In mid-March, the Trump Administration began its attempts to dismantle U.S. International Broadcasting. Harriman Magazine [https://harriman.columbia.edu/harriman-magazine/] editor Masha Udensiva-Brenner [https://harriman.columbia.edu/person/masha-udensiva-brenner/] interviewed journalist Jeffrey Trimble [https://www.usagm.gov/who-we-are/management-team/jeffrey-trimble/] about the rise and fall of U.S. International Broadcasting in the latest episode of Beyond the Scoop: A Harriman Magazine Podcast [https://harriman.columbia.edu/beyond-the-scoop-podcast/], from the Harriman Institute at Columbia University. Trimble, an author [https://harriman.columbia.edu/putting-glasnost-to-the-test/] in the latest issue [https://harriman.columbia.edu/harriman-magazine-2025-issue/] of Harriman Magazine, is a former executive at the U.S. Board of Broadcasting Governors and Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty.  This episode was written and produced by Masha Udensiva-Brenner and edited by Ann Cooper [https://harriman.columbia.edu/person/ann-cooper/]. Music from Blue Dot Sessions. Podcast cover design by Brayden Hill.

13 de may de 202522 min