
Your Davos 2017 reading list
A collection of essays from Davos participants on all the most important topics of the meeting, from inequality to populism to the rise of the robots.
Ceri Parker has worked as Associate Director, Commissioning Editor of Forum Stories at the World Economic Forum.
A collection of essays from Davos participants on all the most important topics of the meeting, from inequality to populism to the rise of the robots.
From Afghanistan's first female orchestra conductor to the man who wants you to recycle everything.
本文是2017年世界经济论坛年会的一部分 下个星期,3000人将汇聚在瑞士山区的一个小镇,参加1月17-20日召开的2017年世界经济论坛年会。他们在那里做些什么?他们是谁,以及他们希望能够达成哪些成绩呢? 达沃斯2017:是什么?
La próxima semana celebramos alrededor de 400 reuniones en una pequeña ciudad de las montañas suizas para la Reunión Anual 2017 del Foro Económico Mundial, que se celebrará del 17 al 20 d...
Who is coming to the World Economic Forum's Annual Meeting 2017, and what do they hope to achieve?
2016 was undoubtedly a big year for news. It was also a big year for Forum Agenda, as we published articles on everything from the Fourth Industrial Revolution to Brexit to robotic bees, ...
El Foro Económico Mundial acaba de celebrar la reunión global de intercambio de ideas en Dubái, pocos días después de que el sorpresivo triunfo de Donald Trump cerrara una campaña elector...
英国脱欧成功和特朗普赢得美国大选,都证明了预言未来,即便是很近的未来,也会非常困难。而要预言十几年后的世界,预言那时城市的架构方式、机械动力的来源、食物的种类、难民的含义等等,则会更为困难。但想象未来社会,可以为我们提供一种面对当今挑战与机遇的全新视角。
From an immigrant turned Canadian senator and the head of the Red Cross, among others.
The World Economic Forum is holding a global brain-storming meeting in Dubai, just days after a surprise win for Donald Trump in the US election sealed a bitterly divisive campaign.
La línea entre la poesía y las letras de canciones es muy delgada, y ambas siempre se han entrelazado, desde la época de las baladas medievales hasta la actualidad.
The divide between poetry and lyric-writing is a thin one at best, and the two have always been intertwined, from medieval ballads to the present day.
The Fourth Industrial Revolution raises some profound ethical questions about the kind of world we want to live in.
We can build cities and robots, we can land a probe on a meteor and mull the colonization of Mars - but can we understand the kilogram or so of grey matter that sits between our ears?
Must-read perspectives on what's ailing global politics.













