The Center for Transatlantic Relations and the Swedish Institute of International Affairs have brought together strategists and experienced practitioners from many different countries to explore how long-term global trends may impact the future of critical global flowsin areas such as energy, resources, IT and communications, trade, ideas, technology, finance, and illicit flows. Policy recommendations focus on how the European Union and the United States can work together to help ensure the continuity and maintenance of these critical global flows as we look towards 2030.
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Editors Brattberg and Hamilton present students, academics, researchers, and professionals working in a variety of contexts with a collection of articles and academic essays that examine issues and concepts in contemporary global flow security. The twelve selections that make up the main body of the text are organized in two parts. The first part examines global flows and trends, with chapters devoted to a conceptual framework for global flow security and an overview of global mega trends. The second part is focused on perspectives in global flow security, with chapters devoted to flow security in the digital age, the future and strategic implications of the global energy flow map, opportunities and threats arising from distorted global flows of materials, and a variety of other subjects. Daniel S. Hamilton is a faculty member of Johns Hopkins University, Maryland. Erik Brattberg is a Non-Resident Scholar at Johns Hopkins University. Annotation ©2015 Ringgold, Inc., Portland, OR (protoview.com)
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