
Politique: un conflit d’intérêts déguisé en un concours de principes.
La conduite des affaires publiques pour un avantage privé.
Ambrose Bierce
Azra Isakovic
Par Azra Isakovic
Dec. 22, 2020
Bonjour
Books/Review – Orthodoxy of the Elites, by Jackson Lears | The New York Review of Books
EU/China – Merkel pushes the EU-China deal – but at what price? by Silke Wettach | WirtschaftsWoche
China and Taiwan: What to Expect in 2021 Ying-Yu Lin, The Diplomat
Why India’s Farmers Won‘t Stop Protesting S. Gupta & S. Ganguly, Foreign Policy
Enough With Johnson’s Reckless Optimism Clare Foges, Times of London
Corruption Cuts Both Ways in Russia’s Surveillance State L. Bershidsky, BB
John Le Carré’s London of Exiles Is Alive and Well David Patrikarakos, Spectator
Why Putin Feels Vindicated by the Pandemic Kadri Liik, ECFR
Protection Without Protectionism Shannon O’Neil, Foreign Affairs
How 2020 Shaped U.S.-China Relations Elizabeth Economy et al, CFR
Brexit and the Brussels Effect Paul De Grauwe, Project Syndicate
Has U.S. Found Sweet Spot With S-400 Sanctions? Daniel Fried, Atlantic Council
Russia/US – An ‘Act of War?’ Avoiding a Dangerous Crisis in Cyberspace, by Dmitri Trenin | Carnegie Russia
China’s Message Control Jessica Batke & Mareike Ohlberg, ChinaFile
How China Exposed CIA Operatives in Africa, Europe Zach Dorfman, Foreign Policy
Either U.S. Leads on Crypto, or China Will Bill Zeiser, RealClearPolicy
The Subversion of History Education in Scotland Jill Stephenson, Spectator
Did the Arab Uprisings Really Fail? Frederick Deknatel, World Politics Review
Macron Has the Same Problem as Louis XVI Lionel Laurent, Japan Times
After Escape: The New Climate Power Politics, by Adam Tooze | Journal e-flux #114 – December 2020
Le nom de Gaïa. À propos d’un malentendu moderne, par Déborah Bucchi | Revue Germinal