Audio Briefs CSIS
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- Government
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Audio Briefs brings you CSIS publications in audio form. Listen to short, spoken-word summaries from CSIS experts about their latest reports, or hear a full audio version of any CSIS commentary.
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The AI Seoul Summit
An audio version of “The AI Seoul Summit,” a new Critical Questions by CSIS’s Gregory C. Allen and Georgia Adamson. This audio was generated with text-to-speech by Eleven Labs.
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The Defense Industrial Implications of Putin’s Appointment of Andrey Belousov as Minister of Defense
An audio version of “The Defense Industrial Implications of Putin’s Appointment of Andrey Belousov as Minister of Defense,” a new commentary by CSIS’s Nicholas Velazquez, Maeve Sockwell, and Cynthia Cook. This audio was generated with text-to-speech by Eleven Labs.
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Collaboration for a Price: Russian Military-Technical Cooperation with China, Iran, and North Korea
An audio version of Collaboration for a Price: Russian Military-Technical Cooperation with China, Iran, and North Korea, a new report by CSIS’s Max Bergmann, Maria Snegovaya, Tina Dolbaia, and Nick Fenton. This audio was generated with text-to-speech by Eleven Labs.
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The Use of March-In Rights Could Undermine Innovation and National Security
An audio version of “The Use of March-In Rights Could Undermine Innovation and National Security,” a new commentary by CSIS’s Hideki Tomoshige and Sujai Shivakumar. This audio was generated with text-to-speech by Eleven Labs.
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To Make Clean Industry Stick, the United States Needs New Trade Mechanisms
An audio version of “To Make Clean Industry Stick, the United States Needs New Trade Mechanisms,” a new commentary by CSIS’s Allegra Dawes. This audio was generated with text-to-speech by Eleven Labs.
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How Latin American Navies Combat Illegal, Unreported, or Unregulated Fishing
An audio version of “How Latin American Navies Combat Illegal, Unreported, or Unregulated Fishing,” a new commentary by CSIS’s Wilder Alejandro Sánchez. This audio was generated with text-to-speech by Eleven Labs.
Customer Reviews
Good
I enjoy these, but I feel compelled to offer some feedback. First, the link to the report should always be in the show notes. Every single time. Secondly, these are often clipped too early by whoever is editing. Especially at the top of 2024, the speaker is inviting you to visit the website and is abruptly cut off before finishing. That’s a quality control issue noticed in this show. On a personal note, I feel that CSIS wants these to push out the papers, but the listens may want these to be a bit more intriguing i.e. meet the TL;DR crowd halfway and give us 7 minutes instead of 3.5 minutes. Regardless, without a link, how does CSIS track its metrics and know if this podcast is working as intended? Bonus thought: This podcast convinces me that I would love a Mark Cancian / International Security Program podcast, a lot. Please!