The concept of “age of unpeace” by Mark Leonard is used to describe the current situation in Ukraine: it is as if peace, which took so much effort and passion after the Second World War, was unraveling
Media mentions – Mark Leonard
Mark Leonard’s piece, “Beijing becomes a rising star in the global rule-maker race” is published in the Japan Times
Mark Leonard publishes an article on “Who will rule the rules-based order?” in ASPI
Since it is too risky to imagine a war between nuclear powers, States engage into conflicts by manipulating what is linking them
In this interview, Mark Leonard delves into one of the key concepts of his book The Age of Unpeace: How Connectivity Causes Conflict
In his op-ed, Mario Giro mentions Mark Leonard and the concept of “age of unpeace”, conceptualized in his book The Age of Unpeace: How Connectivity Causes Conflict
There is always a tension between the global vision of the United States, with China as the central challenge, and that of the Europeans, who have Russia as their central security challenge
Mark Leonard comments on US and Russia making decisions about Europe’ security – without the EU
The podcast series, The Age of Unpeace: Therapy for internationalists, is recommended in Politico’s newsletter
According to the recently published “Power Atlas”, the relative economic power of the EU and Germany is fading
The newspaper junge welt references content from the Power Atlas
He was suddenly standing for more than Hungary but for wider issues of migration, with support in Germany and Austria and the other Central European states, and that gave him power
What liberated Orban was 2015 and the migration crisis, believes Mark Leonard
Mark Leonard publishes, “In an ‘age of unpeace,’ civilians become new pawns of war” in the Japan Times