To wrap up the Doorstep series, what a great conversation with @nytimes@petersgoodman to discuss his new book, "How the World Ran Out of Everything." https://t.co/IXxEz39dsS
Wonderful @digital_mmc profiling Tatiana Serafin: purpose of the Doorstep "was to speak about what was going on in the world and to connect it to our audience’s everyday lives—to bring it to their doorstep." https://t.co/SzrYyzCoWr
As we wind the Doorstep down, we hope you will use the #doorstep hashtag to highlight posts that show the connectivity between international affairs and day-to-day experiences. And these conversations will be continuing at @carnegiecouncil going forward ...
For all podcasts and book talks of the Doorstep, including our 2022 award-winning @spj_tweets
Sigma Delta Chi episode, please visit us at https://t.co/9cYvCjPcOe.
Four seasons of the Doorstep ... we've accomplished our purpose of better connecting world events to the day-to-day lived experiences of our listeners ... stay tuned at @carnegiecouncil for the next set of initiatives connecting ethics with international affairs!
Watch or listen to the final episode of the @DoorstepPodcast featuring @nytimes’ @petersgoodman discussing how the COVID-19 pandemic unraveled the global supply chain and why reforming it is crucial. https://t.co/EB7hKhc5PK
Watch or listen to the final episode of the @DoorstepPodcast featuring @nytimes’ @petersgoodman discussing how the COVID-19 pandemic unraveled the global supply chain and why reforming it is crucial. https://t.co/EB7hKhc5PK
In her @politico column @nahaltoosi offers a blunt prediction: “In two years, Gaza will be a rubble-ridden set of tent camps policed by the Israeli military.” https://t.co/9qzzz3jLv8
a global and domestic system we take for granted and where access to power, water, food, and a whole range of goods and services takes no more thought than flipping a switch. We hope that the four seasons of the podcast have helped to show how developments around the world ... 2/
Tatiana Serafin is the optimist at the Doorstep. @FPRI_Orbis is the more pessimistic co-host--who thinks that the last 2 episodes-with @RadioFreeTom & @petersgoodman-should get listeners to focus on how shocks--political, geopolitical, economic, environmental--can disrupt ... 1/
The ultimate #doorstep considerations: the goods you need and the jobs you work. @petersgoodman discussed how our just in time supply chains, policy choices and focus on quarterly returns shapes the world we live in.
To wrap up the Doorstep series, what a great conversation with @nytimes@petersgoodman to discuss his new book, "How the World Ran Out of Everything." https://t.co/IXxEz39dsS
Why U.S. allies are worried international hotspots create domestic political liabilities for Biden. @adamcancryn & @nahaltoosi for @politico … https://t.co/Y8fyBptsdE
Raisi's political life bookended the rise & fall of Iran's presidency, for which the fallen Bell 212 is an apt metaphor.
His death is insignificant yet highlights IR's internal contradictions.
My take on the upcoming elections & Iran's future. @unherd https://t.co/arSqOai20u
This tracks with points raised by @msudenver@janinedavidson about how diverse backgrounds and experiences among analysts can catch trends that might be ignored or misunderstood in more homogenous groups.
More speculatively: the specific framing of the 🇩🇪public debate over climate policy in general, as fought out over GEG. This basically came down to the Greens advocating for Regulation+Subsidies/Industrial Pol vs FDP, CDU & some prominent economists advocating carbon prices 1/4