|
The Hijack
|
|
Panels and Discussions
|
Ivan KrastevMarci ShoreSlawomir SierakowskiTimothy SnyderViktoras BachmetjevasFiona Hill, Martin Malek, Francois Heisbourg
|
|
Series: Panels and Discussions
|
Series: Panels and Discussions
|
|
Geopolitical Talks: Overlapping Crises
|
|
Panels and Discussions
|
Ivan KrastevComfort Ero
|
|
Series: Panels and Discussions
|
Series: Panels and Discussions
|
|
Poland, Ukraine, Russia
|
|
Panels and Discussions
|
Ivan KrastevChristian Ultsch
|
|
Series: Panels and Discussions
|
Series: Panels and Discussions
|
|
The Russo-Ukrainian War and the Future of the World
|
|
Panels and Discussions
|
Ivan KrastevTimothy SnyderMisha Glenny
|
|
Series: Panels and Discussions
|
Series: Panels and Discussions
|
|
Humanitarian Crisis Response
|
|
Panels and Discussions
|
Ivan KrastevKristalina Georgieva, Christian Ultsch
|
|
Speakers: Ivan KrastevKristalina Georgieva, Christian Ultsch
Series: Panels and Discussions
|
Speakers: Ivan KrastevKristalina Georgieva, Christian Ultsch
Series: Panels and Discussions
|
|
The New Class Divide and the American Election
|
|
Panels and Discussions
|
Ivan KrastevMark LillaMichael Fleischhacker
|
|
Series: Panels and Discussions
|
Series: Panels and Discussions
|
|
Escaping the Trap of Radicalism
|
|
Panels and Discussions
|
Ivan KrastevLubomir Zaoralek, Christian Ultsch
|
|
Series: Panels and Discussions
|
Series: Panels and Discussions
|
|
Healing the World? – German Foreign Policy between High Aspirations and Competing Imperatives
|
|
Panels and Discussions
|
Ivan KrastevThomas Bagger
|
|
Series: Panels and Discussions
|
Series: Panels and Discussions
|
|
Between Dog and Wolf
|
|
Panels and Discussions
|
Irina ProkhorovaIvan KrastevMichael Laczynski
|
|
Series: Panels and Discussions
|
Series: Panels and Discussions
|
|
The Age of Unpeace: How Connectivity Causes Conflict
|
|
Panels and Discussions
|
Ivan KrastevMark Leonard
|
|
Series: Panels and Discussions
In today’s world, many of the forces that were supposed to bring the world together have ended up driving us apart. Trade, technology, the internet and travel promised to create a global village, but they are also giving countries a reason to fight one another, the opportunity to struggle and an arsenal of new weapons, from cyber-attacks and sanctions to fake news and weaponised vaccines.
Building on the argument from his new book, The Age of Unpeace: How Connectivity Causes Conflict, Mark Leonard, unveils how connectivity has fragmented our societies, politics and made people focus more on what divided them rather than what they hold in common and why this interdependence makes conflict cheaper and more likely in international relations. As the contemporary five big forces driving interdependence – the economy, infrastructure, technology, migration, and international institutions – are being turned into a weapon and change how the topography of power looks like, can we take steps to disarm connectivity and avoid catastrophe?
Read more
|
Series: Panels and Discussions
In today’s world, many of the forces that were supposed to bring the world together have ended up driving us apart. Trade, technology, the internet and travel promised to create a global village, but they are also giving countries a reason to fight one another, the opportunity to struggle and an arsenal of new weapons, from cyber-attacks and sanctions to fake news and weaponised vaccines.
Building on the argument from his new book, The Age of Unpeace: How Connectivity Causes Conflict, Mark Leonard, unveils how connectivity has fragmented our societies, politics and made people focus more on what divided them rather than what they hold in common and why this interdependence makes conflict cheaper and more likely in international relations. As the contemporary five big forces driving interdependence – the economy, infrastructure, technology, migration, and international institutions – are being turned into a weapon and change how the topography of power looks like, can we take steps to disarm connectivity and avoid catastrophe?
Read more
|