The German weekly newspaper refers to Mark Leonard’s concept of “connectivity wars”
Media mentions – Mark Leonard
While more and more countries have set themselves a deadline for climate neutrality, very few can credibly explain how they intend to achieve it
Mark Leonard explains in his op-ed why the climate summit is doomed to fail
The absence of Putin and Xi at the G20 meeting represents the perfect opportunity for Biden to present himself as the leader of the free world
Mark Leonard and Ivan Krastev comment on the European perception on the balance of power between the US and China
The trick is to make these things beneficial for the country’s national affairs. They can either be in control of their energy revolution or watch other countries steal the march on them
Mark Leonard explains that going green can be spun not just to citizens, but governments, as serving their own national interest
Mark Leonard and Jeremy Shapiro use the concept of “asymmetric dependence” to describe Europe’s condition of vulnerability in value chains and control of natural resources to the benefit of other actors such as China, Russia and the US
The Austrian newspaper refers to ECFR survey results on Europe’s invisible divides after covid
Ivan Krastev and Mark Leonard describe in their op-ed Europe’s invisible divides
Mark Leonard’s book “The Age of Unpeace: How Connectivity causes Conflict” is reviewed by The New Stateman
Germany is ‘vastly more important than the other countries on all the big issues, from how to handle China to the tech wars and climate change’
Mark Leonard notes that whoever is the chancellor, Germany is still responsible for more than half of Chinese trade with Europe.
ZEIT Online refers to ECFR’s latest polling on how free or unfree European citizens feel