experts
Bruno Maçães
Nonresident Associate, Carnegie Europe

about


Bruno Maçães is no longer with Carnegie Europe.

Maçães ws a nonresident associate at Carnegie Europe. His research focuses on EU integration and foreign policy, trade policy, and broader globalization trends.

Bruno Maçães received his doctorate in political science from Harvard University in 2007. He has taught at Yonsei University in Seoul and Bard College in Berlin. In 2008 he was a research fellow at the American Enterprise Institute in Washington, DC, where his work focused on the political implications of the biotechnological revolution. He has also worked for a number of political risk consultancy firms.

Maçães was the junior minister for Europe in the Portuguese government from July 2013 until November 2015. He was decorated by Spain and Romania for his work in government.

He is finishing a book on the struggle for the borderlands between Europe and Asia and the prospects for Eurasian economic and political integration. His essays and commentaries on the eurozone crisis, immigration, trade, and digital policy have been published in the Wall Street Journal, the Financial Times, Politico, the Guardian, and Wired.


All work from Bruno Maçães

filters
9 Results
article
China’s Belt and Road: Destination Europe

China’s One Belt, One Road project aims to allow Beijing to influence the rules governing the global economy. That is a challenge to which Europeans need to respond.

· November 9, 2016
In the Media
Transatlantic Relations in a Eurasian World

The next one hundred years of history will be written mostly in the Asia-Pacific region, and the United States wants to play a central role in that drama.

· October 27, 2016
New Eastern Europe
In the Media
Crossing the Caspian: Letter From Turkmenbashi

The small bizarro worlds on both sides of the Caspian shore are laboratories for economic and social transformation in an unstable but critically important region of the world.

· October 20, 2016
Foreign Affairs
In the Media
Did Turkey’s Moves Toward Russia Provoke the Coup?

While the causes of Turkey’s failed coup remain shrouded in mystery, Ankara’s policy shift toward Moscow could have played a role.

· August 10, 2016
National Interest
In the Media
Brexit, and Rage Against the EU’s Autonomous Machine

The EU has been faced with a seemingly never-ending succession of crises, all of which demand difficult choices to be made.

· July 3, 2016
Europe's World
In the Media
New Western Frontier, Conquered by China

A twenty-first century Silk Road takes shape on the Kazakh border, to Russia’s consternation and beyond the EU’s imagination.

· June 20, 2016
Politico Europe
In the Media
Signs and Symbols on the Sino-Russian Border

There is an island shared by Russia and China that has become a miniature symbol of the vast Asian regions divided between the two geopolitical giants.

· May 5, 2016
Diplomat
event
Bridging the Gaps in EU Foreign Policy
July 8, 2015

Six years after the Lisbon Treaty, there are still major gaps between the EU member states and the institutions on how to shape a strategic foreign policy for the union.

  • +1
How the EU Can Raise Its Game in Foreign Policy

The EU needs to strengthen its foreign policy by preserving, not eradicating, national differences, writes Portugal’s state secretary for Europe.

· July 22, 2014