
Why the West needs to change how it sees itself
Veteran diplomat and philosophical provocateur Kishore Mahbubani in his new book asks a question that has crossed many minds of late: “Has the West lost it?”
Philip is the Programme Lead on International Security and Geopolitics at the World Economic Forum. Previously, he has served in military (Royal Marines) and civilian roles in peacekeeping operations with the United Nations, European Union External Action Service, OSCE and with a humanitarian NGO in Afghanistan. Philip has advised the ASEAN Regional Forum and the UK Ministry of Defence and Foreign Office on stabilization, and has an MA in International Law and Diplomacy from the Fletcher School, Tufts University where he was a US-UK Fulbright Scholar, and an MA in advanced Japanese Studies and a PhD in globalization and security from the University of Sheffield, where he is also an Honorary Research Fellow at the White Rose East Asia Centre.
Veteran diplomat and philosophical provocateur Kishore Mahbubani in his new book asks a question that has crossed many minds of late: “Has the West lost it?”
The recent state of world politics has academics, commentators and pundits gloomily reflecting on the demise of the “global, rules-based order”. Signs are seen in the attitude of Presiden...
In the 1950s the struggle between Communist and American-led UN forces over the Korean Peninsula nearly set off World War III. Having come to power with a promise to “solve the problem” o...
For some time, American government officials, defence secretaries and even presidents have accused Europe of “free riding” on the United States for their security.
Stories about killer robots, machine-augmented heroes, laser weapons and battles in space - outer or cyber - have always been good for filling cinema seats, but now they have started to l...