As June begins, the United Nations finds itself balancing two very different realities. On one hand, diplomats are preparing for…
For the past several years, global leaders have spoken about a “multipolar world” as if it were a distant future scenario. In 2026, it is no longer theoretical.
How The Roosevelt Alliance plans to reconnect everyday Americans with policy, leadership, and civic participation
In the autumn of 1907, a single financier sat in the library of his Madison Avenue brownstone and decided whether…
Intelligence Report sat down with McGlone on the sidelines of the forum to discuss the convergence of ocean policy and multilateral cooperation
This week, something quietly significant is happening inside UN Headquarters in New York.
These organizations convene stakeholders, produce research that informs legislation, and shape the frameworks through which governments and markets operate.
Capital, compute, and counterspace doctrine are converging in orbit faster than governance can adapt, and the institutions positioning themselves now will define the strategic landscape of the next several decades.
Over the next five years, a plausible scenario is emerging in which a small number of dominant technology and artificial intelligence firms consolidate core digital infrastructure.
On January 17th, 2026, the High Seas Treaty or BBNJ Agreement, formally entered into force.
