Allison Meakem Next year’s contests are set to bring populist reckonings, parliamentary headaches, and a possible democratic crisis or two. Jon Benedict illustration for Foreign Policy/Getty Images In the United States, where campaigns are temporally unbounded and election season seems constant, politicians and observers alike are already fixated …
Read More »Five Major Diplomatic Disputes That Could Spell More Trouble in 2022
Robbie Gramer From the AUKUS fracas to China’s bullying tactics in Europe, here are some of the top diplomatic spats from the past year that could haunt us in the next. U.S. President Joe Biden gestures as he meets with Chinese President Xi Jinping during a virtual summit …
Read More »Ethical aspects relating to cyberspace: utilitarianism and deontology
Giancarlo Valori Obviously, web ethics must primarily be behavioural in nature. Its task is to serve as a tool for making decisions in morally difficult situations. However, as long as web ethics is seen only as one of the mechanisms of the Internet normative self-regulation, based on the …
Read More »Omicron Is Pushing America Into Soft Lockdown
Sarah Zhang “I do not see a scenario for any kind of shutdown,” New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio declared this week, as parts of New York were in fact shutting down all around him. Broadway canceled show after show. Restaurants closed their kitchens. De Blasio’s successor, …
Read More »Boosting Transatlantic Technology Cooperation
Robert Atkinson During the era of the Cold War, the United States and Europe cooperated militarily, but competed economically. At the time, the Soviet Union posed a military, not an economic, threat to the West. Today, in what could become a second Cold War, this time with China, …
Read More »What Kind of Economy Will Germany’s New Leader Inherit?
Stephan Richter spoke to Marketplace’s David Brancaccio about the issues Germany’s new chancellor Olaf Scholz will face in office. German Chancellor Angela Merkel’s term will come to an end this week. Social Democrat Olaf Scholz will take office once the country’s Congress affirms his government with a vote, …
Read More »China’s Belt and Road Initiative: Slowly Imploding?
James Dorsey The Chinese-dominated Pakistani port city of Gwadar — the crown jewel of China’s Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) — increasingly looks like a powder keg that has exploded. For the past month, mass protests have swept Gwadar, a Chinese-dominated Pakistani port city 90 kilometers from the …
Read More »Airbus has a $260 million wide-body jet that it just can’t sell
Thomas Pallini A Uganda Airlines Airbus A330-800neo.Thomas Pallini/Insider Airbus has only sold 15 of its A330-800neo aircraft, the next-generation variant of the popular A330-200. Uganda Airlines, Air Greenland, Kuwait Airlines, and Garuda Indonesia are the only four airlines to purchase the aircraft. One expert says that airlines don’t …
Read More »The diplomatic waltz rounds of the United Arab Emirates
Giancarlo Valori Abu Dhabi sets aside differences between the seven United Arab Emirates (Ras Al Khaimah, Sharjah, Abu Dhabi, Umm Al Quwain, Ajman, Dubai and Fujairah) for rapprochement with Iran, in line with its bilateral dialogue with other countries in the region. The United Arab Emirates (UAE) has …
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