#1 Urgent pandemic messaging of WHO, World Bank, and G20 is inconsistent with their evidence base
#2 The diverse cities of global urban climate governance
#3 Existential security: Safeguarding humanity or globalising power?
Edited by Rajeswari Pillai Rajagopalan and Sameer Patil, the essays in this volume seek to unpack key critical technologies and explore their implications for the future of warfare. Among other themes, they tackle cyberwarfare, challenges of attribution, swarming drones, autonomous weapons, AI and nuclear weapons and space.
This launch event – co-hosted by the China Centre at the University of Oxford, Fudan University and IDOS – provides an overview of key findings from a Global Policy Special Issue on how the world’s most prominent “rising power” engages with the world’s foremost international organisation.
I and many other observers see the world changing dramatically around us - from technology, from geopolitics, from economic and financial turbulence, from the rise of the rest. We figure the best global thinking needs to be joined up across fields. Yet others might still disagree on both hypotheses. Regardless, Global Policy is the right journal for our times, and what will emerge from its pages will inform debate of global significance.
Anne-Marie Slaughter is the Bert G. Kerstetter '66 University Professor of Politics and International Affairs at Princeton University. From 2009–2011 she served as Director of…
Suresh Nanwani has more than 30 years of development work experience in international organizations including the World Bank, Asian Development Bank, and European Bank for…