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Ian Bremmer is a political scientist who helps business leaders, policy makers, and the general public make sense of the world around them. He is president and founder of Eurasia Group, the world’s leading political risk research and consulting firm, and GZERO Media, a company dedicated to providing intelligent and engaging coverage of international affairs. Ian is an independent voice on ...
Jun 20, 2022 · Geopolitics is in a 'bust cycle', says Ian Bremmer, head of Eurasia Group. Institutions created after the Second World War need urgent reform, and crises will force that to happen, he argues. Subscribe to the Radio Davos podcast here and hear all our coverage from Davos 2022 here. In coming years, humanity will face viruses deadlier and more ...
Ian Bremmer: Brace yourself — Trump’s foreign policy could reshape the business world
Around the world in 2024, voters chose change: in South Africa, France, Britain, and Japan. But nowhere does the anti-incumbent trend matter more than in the United States. The global uncertainty ...
Fortune via Yahoo
13 hours ago
The sharpest analysis on the web about the 4 contenders for Trump's Treasury pick
Scott Bessent, Howard Lutnick, Marc Rowan and Kevin Warsh are in the running for Treasury Secretary. Here is some of the best analysis of who Trump might pick.
INSIDER via Yahoo
10 hours ago
Ian Bremmer is an American political scientist specializing in US foreign policy, states in transition, and global political risk. He is the president and founder of Eurasia Group, a political risk research and consulting firm. As of December 2014, he is foreign affairs columnist and editor-at-large at TIME. In 2013, he was named Global Research Professor at New York University. Eurasia Group ...
Ian Bremmer is a political scientist who helps business leaders, policy makers, and the general public make sense of the world around them. He is president and founder of Eurasia Group, the world’s leading political risk research and consulting firm, and GZERO Media, a company dedicated to providing intelligent and engaging coverage of international affairs. Ian is an independent voice on ...
What's in store for 2024? Ian Bremmer's political risk consultancy predicts an 'annus horribilis' but Exponential View's Azeem Azhar says we are in an 'incredible decade'. So is the state of the world 'glass half empty, or half full'? And in an uncertain world, Oxford University's Rachel Botsman, tells why trust is so vital, and how it can be re-built, or rather, re-earned.
The ties that bind the world economy together have frayed in recent years. From the competition over advanced microchip manufacturing between the US and China to Russia's war in Ukraine, globalization is undeniably entering a new phase. But has globalization reached the end of the line — or is a resurgence on the cards? This is the full audio of the session at the World Economic Forum's ...
Oct 10, 2024 · Ian Bremmer, author and founder of the research and consulting firm Eurasia Group, says while many of the global bodies created after the Second World War are no longer fit to cope with today’s crises, the size of those crises themselves, might compel them to reform and renew.
Apr 2, 2015 · Author: Ian Bremmer is president of Eurasia Group, global research professor at New York University and foreign affairs columnist at TIME. Image: China’s President Xi Jinping (front C) poses for photos with guests at the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank launch ceremony at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing October 24, 2014.
Mar 27, 2024 · Andrea Willige. 2024 will be a year of uncertainty and more trust is needed to overcome the challenges ahead of us, three experts tell Radio Davos. 2024 is shaping up to be a seminal year in world history, against a backdrop of geopolitical tension, technological advances and elections involving more than half the world’s population.
Jan 7, 2015 · In this World Economic Forum video, Dr. Bremmer says that the absence of global leadership is problematized by the lack of shared values between the US and China. Bremmer says the two strongest economic players have ‘incompatible’ views on national security, governance and financial outlook, and managing the relationship between them will ...