41 to 50 of about 8872
At a time when Europe faces existential risks in the form of climate change and geopolitical competition, an over-cautious application of technical rules risks missing the bigger picture.
Will political change, as signaled by the Karnataka election results, translate into change at the grass roots — or has the Sangh Parivar taken over society?
Formal normalization between Israel and Saudi Arabia has been a longstanding U.S. goal. The questions, though, are how much that normalization is worth in today’s climate, what Washington should be prepared to pay for it, and what it should receive in return.
The messy nature of decisions is important both for US citizens and the world.
St. Petersburg International Economic Forum (SPIEF) is the main event in Russia’s business calendar. However the gathering has recently become less and less international. The absence of high-ranking guests from the West is no surprise, but this year is also notable for a dearth of top Middle Eastern officials — and even the lack of many executives from leading Russian companies.
The battle over Israel’s democracy may further inflame conflict with the Palestinians.
Multi-alignment—when states form overlapping relationships with several major powers—is not a back-up option for these states but their first choice.
Debating Israel’s One-State Reality
This new reality is a good occasion to look back at the neoliberal agenda and consider which parts of it were actually valid and were too readily discarded, and which aspects of its critique remain on target.
In her weekly guide to the Russian economy, Alexandra Prokopenko focuses on Russia’s possible blacklisting by the Financial Action Task Force (FATF), which could mean the severing of one of its last ties to the global financial system. She also looks at new measures to stop officials traveling abroad and Central Bank head Elvira Nabiullina’s visit to Iran.