
Davos 2023: What you need to know about geopolitics
Here's what to watch on geopolitics and globalization at the Annual Meeting 2023, Davos as the heads of state and government meet with business and society leaders.
Here's what to watch on geopolitics and globalization at the Annual Meeting 2023, Davos as the heads of state and government meet with business and society leaders.
Shereen Bhan of Indian business news channel CNBC-TV18 joins Radio Davos to look ahead to Day 3 of Davos 2022 when climate change and cybersecurity are on the agenda.
Russia’s invasion of Ukraine signals the emergence of new era of geopolitics with heightened fears over security, economics, energy, and ideological interests.
The world must invest now to build a green, resilient, inclusive economy. A Green, Resilient and Inclusive Development (GRID) approach can help direct us.
Human capital is the next big investment space and will underpin sustainable economic growth in the years to come.
Global economic governance can aid transition to a green economy, but trade tensions are thwarting progress. A new report outlines 11 ways to overcome this
Members of the World Economic Forum Global Future Council on Geopolitics discuss the biggest impact technology will have on geopolitics in the coming year.
The pandemic has opened up an opportunity for international investors and companies to invest in infrastructure in emerging markets.
Development issues are becoming part of a mounting ideological competition between the two top powers in the world.
Read an extract from Shashi Tharoor and Samir Saran's latest book.
Read an extract from Dr Samir Saran and Akhil Deo's new book Pax Sinica: Implications for the Indian Dawn.
The metrics that governed the industrial nation state aren't fit for purpose in the fluid era of platform-driven business.
There is no doubt that data is the most important commodity of the modern age, much like oil was in the 1970s. But the comparison is too simplistic - and for India, the differences betwee...
President of the Observer Research Foundation Samir Saran describes what lies behind current India–U.S. tensions and how they relate to structural changes in the world order