Haitians would like to protest as the Cubans do, but they have no one to complain to. The lack of a state can be as devastating as its excess.
Moisés Naím is a distinguished fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, a best-selling author, and an internationally syndicated columnist.
Naím was the editor-in-chief of Foreign Policy magazine for fourteen years. During his tenure, Foreign Policy won the National Magazine Award for General Excellence three times. He is author of many scholarly articles and more than ten books on international economics and politics. His 2013 book, The End of Power, a New York Times bestseller, was selected by the Washington Post and the Financial Times as one of the best books of the year upon release. His earlier book, Illicit, continues to be widely cited for its pioneering analysis of the globalization of transnational criminal networks. In 2018, he published his first novel Two Spies in Caracas.
In 2011, Naím was awarded the Ortega y Gasset prize, the most prestigious award in Spanish journalism. The British magazine Prospect named him one of the world’s leading thinkers in 2013, and for several years the Gottlieb Duttweiler Institute of Switzerland ranked him among the top 100 global thought leaders. He is also the host and producer of “Efecto Naím,” an Emmy-winning weekly television program on international affairs that airs throughout the Americas on DirectTV (NTN24).
Naím’s experience in public service includes his tenure as Venezuela’s Minister of Trade and Industry in the early 1990s, director of Venezuela’s Central Bank, and executive director of the World Bank. He was a professor of business and economics and dean of IESA, Venezuela’s main business school, and also taught at John Hopkins’ School of Advanced International Studies (SAIS) in Washington.
Naim holds a Ph.D from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and a Doctor Honoris Causa in International Affairs from American University. He is a member of the Council of Foreign Relations and an honorary member of Venezuela’s Academy of Economic Sciences.
Haitians would like to protest as the Cubans do, but they have no one to complain to. The lack of a state can be as devastating as its excess.
To undo decades of misguided government policies, Javier Milei can learn from the hard-won experience of reformers in Eastern Europe, Latin America and beyond.
Across the globe, the institutions that defend democracy are in serious trouble.
Over the last 20 years, Russia has invested heavily in systems capable of attacking the network of underwater cables that account for 95% of all online traffic
The world needs to relearn the art and science of ousting dictators. Or get used to the dismal reality that tyranny and anarchy, not democracy, are the world’s most common form of government.
While the world is preoccupied with climate change, war and artificial intelligence, another profoundly transformative phenomenon is in full swing: space exploration.
Foreign Affairs has recently published a number of articles on the global balance of power, the future of U.S. hegemony, and how great-power competition is playing out in the developing world. To complement these essays, we asked a broad pool of experts for their take.
Today people are seeing how an allergic reaction to authority and hierarchy leads them to hide power relations behind a series of euphemisms that obscure more than they illuminate.
Certainly our society is not ready for what is about to be thrust upon us as a result of the birth of artificial intelligence. Our only alternative appears to be to adapt as quickly as we can, because now that the Pandora’s box is open, there is likely no going back.
Can a military superpower maintain its global dominance even if its population is shrinking? What about when its population is ageing and will soon be dominated by the elderly? These are not hypothetical questions; they are happening right now.