500 episodes

Weekly podcast on the events, policies and ideas that will shape the world.World in 30 minutes is curated by Mark Leonard, Director of the European Council on Foreign Relations (ECFR), and features top-level speakers from across the EU and beyond to debate and discuss Europe’s role in the world. It was awarded “Best podcasts on EU politics” by PolicyLab in 2019.Member of the EuroPod network.
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Mark Leonard's World in 30 Minutes ECFR

    • News

Weekly podcast on the events, policies and ideas that will shape the world.World in 30 minutes is curated by Mark Leonard, Director of the European Council on Foreign Relations (ECFR), and features top-level speakers from across the EU and beyond to debate and discuss Europe’s role in the world. It was awarded “Best podcasts on EU politics” by PolicyLab in 2019.Member of the EuroPod network.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    The Great Firewall: How China regulates big tech

    The Great Firewall: How China regulates big tech

    In the past couple of decades, China has produced a multitude of big tech giants. Companies like Alibaba, Tencent, ByteDance and others are well on their way to becoming household names, unique in their ability to rival their American counterparts, such as Amazon, Google, or Microsoft. Still, their relationship with the Chinese state is far from frictionless, as shown by China’s October 2020 tech crackdown, in which they unleased of an array of regulatory measures against big tech firms.
    In this week’s episode, Mark Leonard welcomes Angela Zhang, associate professor of law at the University of Hong Kong and director of the Philip K.H. Wong Centre for Chinese Law, to discuss China’s big tech regulation. How is China regulating its big tech firms? What role do these firms play in China’s competition with Europe and the United States? And what are the lessons for Europe’s own attempts at tech regulation?
    This episode was recorded on 21 May 2024
    Bookshelf
    High Wire: How China Regulates Big Tech and Governs Its Economy, by Angela Zhang
    Wuhan: How the COVID-19 Outbreak in China Spiraled Out of Control, by Dali L. Yang

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    • 29 min
    Algorithmic agendas: The globalisation of political technology

    Algorithmic agendas: The globalisation of political technology

    Political technology, or the professional engineering of politics, has been endemic to Russia since the Soviet era. But these practices have now spread across the globe – with manipulation occurring in China, European countries, India, the United States, and many others. And the political engineering industry goes well beyond mere online disinformation. From data mining to astroturfing and propaganda apps, a global market is emerging for the whole gamut of manipulation techniques. 
    In this week’s episode, Mark Leonard welcomes Andrew Wilson, senior policy fellow at ECFR and professor of Ukrainian studies at University College London, to discuss political technology and the globalisation of political manipulation. Where did the term political technology originate? How does it spread? And what can democracies do to defend themselves? 
    This episode was recorded on 21 May 2024 
    Bookshelf 
    Political Technology: The Globalisation of Political Manipulation, by Andrew Wilson 
    How to Steal a Presidential Election, by Lawrence Lessig and Matthew Seligman 

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    • 30 min
    The sweet spot: Between de-risking from China and Europe’s green future

    The sweet spot: Between de-risking from China and Europe’s green future

    A key priority for both the European Union and the United States is to reduce dependencies on China in green industries. Only this week, the United States announced a ramping up of tariffs on Chinese-made electric vehicles, solar panels, steel, and other goods. However, with China’s dominant position in the production of green technologies, European policymakers are facing difficult decisions when it comes to de-risking. Again and again, national security and domestic economic considerations have to be weighed against the effects of climate change.  
    In this week’s episode, Mark Leonard welcomes Robbie Diamond, founder and CEO of SAFE, and of its European Initiative for Energy Security (EIES), and Janka Oertel, director of ECFR’s Asia programme and co-author of ECFR’s upcoming policy brief on de-risking, to discuss de-risking and the future of Europe’s green industries. How should the EU tackle the issue of dependency on China? Is it possible to find a sweet spot between successful de-risking and not slowing down the green transition? And how is the US response different from the EU’s? 
    This episode was recorded on 15 May 2024 

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    • 25 min
    A vision for the future: Adapting Europe’s single market

    A vision for the future: Adapting Europe’s single market

    When Europe’s single market was first conceived in the 1980s, the number of member states was half of what it is today, the Soviet Union still existed, Germany was not yet reunified, and the Chinese and Indian economies comprised less than 5 per cent of the global economy. Now, the European Union’s economic, political, and demographic landscape is almost unrecognisable. While the single market continues to be a cornerstone of European integration, it urgently needs strengthening to adapt to this changing global order.
    In this week’s episode, Mark Leonard welcomes former Italian prime minister and ECFR council member Enrico Letta to discuss his report examining the European single market’s future. Why is the single market so important? How can it be improved to meet today’s geopolitical challenges? And what are the dangers if the EU doesn’t adapt?
    This podcast was recorded on 26 April 2024.
    Bookshelf
    Salviamo l’Europa: Otto parole per riscrivere il futuro by Michele Bellini
    L’Europe enfla si bien qu’elle creva: De 27 à 36 États? by Sylvie Goulard


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    • 32 min
    The European pulse: the election and beyond

    The European pulse: the election and beyond

    With the European Parliament election only one month away, there is feverish speculation about who will get the top jobs of Commission President, President of the Council, and High Representative of the Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy. With predictions of a far-right surge and the influence of domestic politics, this electoral cycle will be crucial in shaping the very future of European politics. 
    Live from the ECFR staff retreat in Bologna, Mark Leonard welcomes Jana Puglierin, Célia Belin, José Ignacio Torreblanca, Arturo Varvelli, Maria Simeonova, and Piotr Buras, the heads of our Berlin, Paris, Madrid, Rome, Sofia, and Warsaw offices, respectively, to discuss the election. In addition to giving their best guesses as to who will get what jobs, they will take a closer look at how domestic politics is likely to influence the elections and shape the Europe that emerges from them. 
    The podcast was recorded on 28 April 2024
    Bookshelf 
    Battle redux: Macron, Le Pen, and France’s European election campaign by Célia Belin 
    The long shadow of the populists: Donald Tusk’s first 100 days by Piotr Buras 
    Turning point or turning back: German defence policy after Zeitenwende by Jana Puglierin 
    Hanging in the balance: How to save Bulgaria’s foreign policy from political turmoil by Maria Simeonova 
    La hora más crítica de la Unión Europea by José Ignacio Torreblanca 
    The Atlantic is not enough: The Italian government’s difficult relations in Europe by Arturo Varvelli  
    The European Union as a War Project: Five Pathways toward a Geopolitical Europe by Mark Leonard  

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    • 34 min
    High stakes in the strait: US -China competition and Taiwan’s future

    High stakes in the strait: US -China competition and Taiwan’s future

    Taiwan has come to represent a strategic flashpoint in US-China relations. As Beijing ramps up its political and military pressure on Taipei, any escalation could trigger a major conflict between the two powers. Unlike Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, China may have to reckon with direct US intervention if it chose to invade Taiwan. Alongside this, the US-China strategic competition is rising, with the United States’ strategic approach involving aggressive export controls, maintaining tariffs, and creation of alliances in the Indo-Pacific.
    In this week’s episode, Mark Leonard welcomes Dmitri Alperovitch, co-founder and chairman of national security think-tank Silverado Policy Accelerator, to discuss US-China competition and the likelihood of a Chinese invasion of Taiwan. What would the consequences of an invasion be? What can the US do about it? And what role should Europeans play in all of this?
    This episode was recorded on 25 April 2024
    Bookshelf:
    To Run the World: The Kremlin's Cold War Bid for Global Power by Sergey Radchenko

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    • 35 min

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