COVID-19 and the Futures of Conflict in the Middle East
Ongoing analysis in the Middle East Institute’s (MEI) Strategic Foresight Initiative is examining scenarios of what conflict in the region could look like in 2025 based on different combinations of factors related to the COVID-19 pandemic. MEI is pleased to bring together experts to pose two important questions: What signals do we see of the pandemic’s impacts affecting foreign policy and conflict behaviors of key actors in the region? How are long standing social dynamics in the region being affected by the pandemic and in turn influencing conflict dynamics?
Видео COVID-19 and the Futures of Conflict in the Middle East канала Middle East Institute
Видео COVID-19 and the Futures of Conflict in the Middle East канала Middle East Institute
Показать
Комментарии отсутствуют
Информация о видео
Другие видео канала
How COVID-19 and the oil shock will reshape the Middle EastWatch NBC News NOW Live - October 21A Deep Look into the Biology and Evolution of COVID-19Is a Plan B Needed to Save Afghanistan?The Future of Saudi Arabia and Its Crown Prince: A Book Talk with Ben Hubbard and Susanne KoelblAssessing China policy from city halls, governors’ mansions, and Capitol HillFrom the Sidelines of Nagorno-Karabkh: Georgia, Russia, and TurkeyLosing the Long Game: A Book Talk with Philip H. GordonExamining the EU-Iran-US TriangleLiberal order undone? Japan’s leadership role after Prime Minister AbeRussia and China: Common interests and rivalry in South Caucasus and Central AsiaAIDS and the HIV Life CycleWill air travel ever recover? Australia's aviation crisis and the future of flying | Four CornersPublic Opinion, Annexation, and Normalization: A 2020 Zogby Research PollWaves: Light, Sound, and the nature of RealityThe Genesis of the 1918 Spanish Influenza PandemicFighting to the End: The Pakistan Army's Way of WarRearticulating Development Strategies: COVID-19, human development & the environmentInstability in the Middle East | Institute of PoliticsWhat Doctors Are Learning From Autopsy Findings of New CORONAVIRUS Patients