Davos made it clear: the new global era of multiplexity is finally out of the shadows.
What made Carney's speech less scary was the fact that we know the new 'multiplex' world order—one defined by complex multipolar systems of cooperation—has been developing with prosperity in the backdrop of this rupture.
The Future of Jobs : From Forced Synthesis to Survival Entrepreneurship
Many niches are disappearing, forcing graduates to set aside their specialist industries and integrate with those that remain.
Russia's economy is haemorrhaging. Why should we assume it will maintain its great power status after the war in Ukraine?
Next month will mark the fourth year of the Russian invasion of Ukraine. In recent months, much discussion has focused on the current world order.
Misinformation: Who’s Regulating the Wicked Problem of Now? Anyone?
In 2025, the World Economic Forum named mis- and disinformation as the most severe short-term risk to global security. Yet state governments and corporations lack a unified definition of these terms in the digital sphere and a distinct strategy to combat their spread.
The U.S. Attack on Venezuela: Defining Modern Imperialism
One could define each period in history by its geopolitical conditions. By what makes each act by a state or empire possible, what conditions of the period allow monumental acts of foreign policy to be executed.
Why we buy together: Politics and the live commerce turn
When we look back, 2025 and the years to come will be determined by the meteoric rise of live shopping and AI chatbot advertising, and by their innovative contributions to collective memory.
Skip colour theory, give us pageantry capitalism
Being a consumer now means being exposed to more brands than our parents ever dreamed existed. It means being exposed to thousands of concepts, 'ethos', taglines and campaigns that focus on bringing something ‘to life’. For many brands recently, that means relying on a specific colour in their portfolio to communicate for them.