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86 episodes
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Foreign Policy Live Foreign Policy
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Each week, Foreign Policy Live will feature a substantive conversation on world affairs. Host and FP editor in chief Ravi Agrawal will be joined by leading foreign-policy thinkers and practitioners to analyze a key issue in global politics, from the U.S.-China relationship to conflict and diplomacy. FP Live is your weekly fix for smart thinking about the world.
Foreign Policy magazine subscribers can watch these interviews live and submit questions and suggestions by going to https://foreignpolicy.com/live/.
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How to Fix Capitalism
Is capitalism broken? A growing number of Americans think so amid declining social mobility and rising inequality. According to investor Ruchir Sharma, author of What Went Wrong With Capitalism, the United States has gone on a decades-long debt binge, with too many regulations and a culture of bailouts, which he says has weakened dynamism in the economy—and capitalism itself. Sharma joins FP Live to discuss potential solutions and lessons from around the world.
Suggested reading:
Ravi Agrawal: Capitalism Is Broken. Here’s How to Fix It.
Cameron Abadi: Adam Tooze: What Is ESG Investing and Why the Sudden Backlash?
Ashley Lester: Why Is Adam Smith Still So Popular?
Adam Tooze: The Hidden History of the World’s Top Offshore Cryptocurrency Tax Haven
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How to Solve the World’s Refugee Crisis
The United Nations’ high commissioner for refugees Filippo Grandi talks to FP Live ahead of a visit to Sudan on World Refugee Day. Are international institutions adequately equipped to help a rising number of displaced people around the world? What more should be done?
Neha Wadekar: The World’s Refugee Relief is Utterly Broken
Shelly Culbertson: A Chance to Fix the Broken Refugee Model
Robbie Gramer: Why is the World Ignoring a Looming Genocide in Sudan?
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Why India’s Modi Underperformed
From pundits to polls, there was a wide expectation this year that Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi would not only win a rare third consecutive term, but also secure an even bigger parliamentary majority than he had before. As results emerged on Tuesday, it was clear that India’s voters had other ideas. Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party won the most seats—more than the entire opposition alliance combined—but it will need the help of coalition allies to form a government.
How will Modi govern in a third term, and what will it mean for the world? FP’s Ravi Agrawal is joined by experts Milan Vaishnav and Yamini Aiyar to discuss.
Suggested reading:
Ravi Agrawal: Why Modi Underperformed
Devesh Kapur: Modi’s Power Has Peaked
Sushant Singh:Modi’s Campaign Rhetoric Is Dangerous
Ravi Agrawal: The New Idea of India
Mukul Kesavan: 4 Books to Understand Modern India
Josh Felman and Josh Felman: Is India Really the Next China?
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What to Expect From Mexico’s Elections
The presidential election in Mexico this weekend will likely result in the country’s first female president. It’s an open question, however, whether the front-runner in the polls and expected winner, Claudia Sheinbaum, will carry on the policies of her political mentor, President Andrés Manuel López Obrador. Former Mexican Ambassador to the United States Arturo Sarukhán joins Ravi Agrawal to analyze López Obrador’s legacy and how Mexico’s next leader may or may not enact different policies.
Suggested reading:
Christina Lu: Mexico’s Historic Elections, Explained
Ana Sofía Rodríguez Everaert: The Woman Inheriting AMLO’s Revolution
Isidro Morales: Mexico’s Next Leader Has an Energy Problem
Connor Pfeiffer and Ryan C. Berg: Mexico and the United States Need to Talk About China Now
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Fareed Zakaria’s ‘Age of Revolutions’
Does progress always come with a backlash? How should societies think about managing the immense changes unleashed by technology and globalization? CNN host and author Fareed Zakaria joins FP Live to discuss his latest book, Age of Revolutions: Progress and Backlash From 1600 to the Present.
Suggested reading:
Michael Hirsh: Is This a Revolution? Or Are People Just Very Ticked Off?
Michael Hirsh: No, This Is Not a Cold War—Yet
Fareed Zakaria: Age of Revolutions: Progress and Backlash From 1600 to the Present
Fareed Zakaria: The Rise of Illiberal Democracy
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What Raisi’s Death Means for Iran’s Future
Tehran has announced that it will hold elections on June 28 after President Ebrahim Raisi died in a helicopter crash on Sunday. Who might win, and what would that mean for Iranian politics—both at home and abroad? Iran experts Karim Sadjadpour and Robin Wright join FP’s Ravi Agrawal to discuss.
Suggested reading:
Robin Wright: What Raisi’s Death Means for the Future of Iran
Ali Vaez and Hamidreza Azizi: Why Iran Believes It’s Winning Against Israel
Jack Detsch: What Raisi’s Death Means for Iran’s Future
Raphael S. Cohen: The Iran-Israel War Is Just Getting Started
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