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- 1From:Foreign Policy (Issue 239)The pandemic has already transformed our world We asked 12 leading global thinkers to predict what happens in 2021 and beyond. One year after Covid-19 began its relentless spread across the world, the contours of a...
- 2From:Skeptical Inquirer (Vol. 42, Issue 2)Last year my wife and I bought our first home, in a Massachusetts town north of Boston. When we moved to the town, we had no friends in the area or family member. If we were going to navigate the complexities of buying...
- 3From:The Weekly Standard (Vol. 17, Issue 23)Reading Andrew Ferguson's splendid essay this week on Bill Clinton (see page 20), The Scrapbook was especially beguiled by his detailed description of the Clinton Global Initiative (CGI), that world-class gathering of...
- 4From:Modern Healthcare (Vol. 39, Issue 17)* Almost all of the opinion leaders surveyed, 97%, support or strongly support reforming the payment system to improve quality and efficiency. Of those surveyed, 94% strongly support or support a streamlined approval...
- 5From:The Economist (Vol. 398, Issue 8717)Not everyone loves Davos Where the influential people meet and talk "YOU can do nothing against a conspiracy theory," sighs Etienne Davignon. He sits in a lofty office with a stupendous view over Brussels, puffing...
- 6From:Modern Healthcare (Vol. 39, Issue 17)Byline: Rebecca Vesely Stop the bleeding. Stat. To slow ever-escalating healthcare costs, comprehensive reform to provider paymentsas opposed to incremental changeis a necessity, according to an overwhelming...
- 7From:Reason (Vol. 42, Issue 11)THE LEFT BLAMED the right. The right blamed the left. Half of Twitter blamed maps with little cross-hairs icons on them. But binary political gamesmanship was only the beginning in the Jared Lee Loughner blame game....
- 8From:Spectator (Vol. 315, Issue 9524)Colonel Gaddafi declared: 'All my people are with me. They love me.' Few world leaders are lucky to be so popular. Here are some recent approval ratings: Barack Obama 49% Angela Merkel 41% David Cameron 38% Nicolas...
- 9From:The New Yorker (Vol. 88, Issue 3)The annual meeting of the World Economic Forum, in Davos, Switzerland, was well under way when it officially commenced, early on a Wednesday evening in January, with an address, in the Congress Hall of the Congress...
- 10From:New African (Issue 528)There is no doubt that the pragmatic consensus is that Africa has the highest economic growth potential of any continent in the world today and that positive factors on the ground make investment opportunities in Africa...
- 11From:Foreign Policy (Issue 215)Getting to yes is rarely easy. This year, however, diplomats and politicians came together to open long-closed doors in Iran and Cuba, bring Greece back from the precipice of collapse (for now, at least), and address a...
- 12From:Foreign Policy (Issue 200)IS IT POSSIBLE TO IDENTIFY the 500 most powerful individuals on the planet-one in 14 million? That's what we tried to do with the inaugural FP Power Map, our inventory of the people who control the commanding heights of...
- 13From:Foreign Policy (Issue 215)No belief was too deep-seated, no institution too entrenched, and no cause too daunting for these Global Thinkers to tackle in the name of effecting change. Some of them targeted corruption in organizations so powerful...
- 14From:The Economist (Vol. 410, Issue 8871)Of the 2,622 hobnobbers invited to this year's World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, just 15% are women. Two-thirds of the delegates hail from Western countries that are home to just 12% of the world's population....
- 15From:History Today (Vol. 61, Issue 1)I took a class recently that examined the American Black Power movement of the 1960s. We looked at authors and activists who made some idiosyncratic observations about Cold War America. Among the charges were that the...
- 16From:Foreign Policy (Issue 215)From the Vatican's pulpit to Australia's Aboriginal communities, the halls of the United Nations to the rice fields of Vietnam, these Global Thinkers wielded influence across diverse locales in hopes of cleaning up the...
- 17From:New Statesman (Vol. 140, Issue 5046)Oily Grender says comment may be free, but it's also pointless Can anyone give a good reason why ministers should bother reading commentary in the newspapers? newstatesman.com/blogs/olly-grender...
- 18From:Publishers Weekly (Vol. 260, Issue 23)These 10 leaders on the Nashville literary scene play an essential role in determining which books become bestsellers in the city and help shape the Nashville literary community. Their influence also extends beyond the...
- 19From:The Atlantic (Vol. 310, Issue 2)Earlier this summer, in conjunction with its annual Ideas Issue, The Atlantic co-hosted the Aspen Ideas Festival with the Aspen Institute. Here are some of the highlights from the yearly gathering in Colorado. In the...
- 20From:Management TodayThe chief exec wants to become a TED-style opinion leader. Can the comms chief stop him making an even bigger fool of himself? MONDAY As communications director, I've always viewed PR as a kind of giant condom for...