Friday, April 19, 2024

Opinion

A #ModernandCompetitivePortugal and a Green and Global Europe in West Africa

Vítor Sereno, Portuguese Ambassador to Senegal At the Portuguese Embassy in Dakar - covering seven countries and one million square kilometres of coastline, the Sahelian desert and located in a stable economic region where states share a single currency -...

The Third Wave in the Azores

Pedro de Faria e Castro, Regional Undersecretary of the Presidency 2021 marks the 45th anniversary of the political and administrative autonomy of the archipelagos of the Azores and Madeira. The national political context that was experienced in 1976 finally allowed the...

Is the Best of Us Yet to Come?

Rosália Amorim, Journalist

After the Storm Comes the Collection

Pedro Santos Guerreiro, Journalist

A Way Out for Journalism

António Costa, Journalist at ECO If we want to sell journalism, we have to do journalism’, it is an assertion that can be read in Anglo-Saxon journalism. It is quite obvious, but media companies tend to forget it quite often....

Artigos recentes | Recent articles

AMO and H/Advisors – A short history

It all started 22 years ago on Madison Avenue. Three of the world’s most senior financial PR professionals met to discuss a ground-breaking alliance, that would change the shape of the communications industry.

A conversation with Henry Kissinger

Over two days in late April 2023, The Economist spent over eight hours in conversation with Dr Kissinger. Just weeks before his 100th birthday, the former secretary of state and national security adviser laid out his concerns about the risks of great power conflict and offered solutions for how to avoid it. This is a transcript of the conversation, lightly edited for clarity.

The world on the wrong path

A new geopolitical and economic order is being written through the emergence of China as an economic, military and diplomatic superpower and threatening the status of the United States. We are heading towards a multipolar world in which the search for strategic autonomy is changing the dynamics of international trade for the worse. Nothing will be more determinant to the world’s destiny over forthcoming years than the relationship between Beijing and Washington. Europe risks being a mere bystander.
- Advertisement -