-
Pages
Authors
Topics
- Africa (81)
- Asia (95)
- Asia Pacific (21)
- Cities (35)
- Climate Change (162)
- Communication (153)
- Conflict and security (241)
- Cooperation and coherence (143)
- Development (112)
- Europe (142)
- Food prices (95)
- Global economy (157)
- Influence (162)
- Latin America (1)
- Leadership (117)
- Maps (20)
- Middle East (125)
- Networks (87)
- News (220)
- Off topic (67)
- Public diplomacy (91)
- Religion in politics (28)
- Resilience (113)
- Russia (29)
- Scarcity (151)
- Technology (59)
- Terrorism (102)
- UK politics (161)
- US politics (240)
- What we're reading (2)
- What we're watching (1)
Archives
Reading List- Noah Millman on ratings agencies
- Willem Buiter: Can the US economy afford a Keynesian stimulus?
- Make Architects' zero carbon scheme for Greenwich goes to planning - Building Design
- Michael Lewis - The End of the Financial World as We Know It
- Interview: She's home from jail, but Lynndie England can't escape Abu Ghraib - The Guardian
- Microfinance’s ‘iron law’ – local economies reduced to poverty
- Consideration of Future Consequences
- Wikileaks Posts Secret Bomb-Stopper Report — Did It Go Too Far?
- Black on Murdoch
- China Fears Restive Migrants As Jobs Disappear in Cities - WSJ.com
Links
- Behind the Numbers
- Center on International Cooperation
- Chris Blattman
- Contingency Today
- Cooperation Commons
- Dan Drezner
- Dan Smith
- Danger Room
- Dani Rodrik
- Democracy in America
- Demos
- DFID blogs
- ECFR
- FCO blogs
- ForeignPolicy.com blog
- Gideon Rachman
- Global Guerrillas
- Guy Yeomans
- Inside Iraq
- Institute for the Future
- Kevin Drum
- Kevin Kelly
- Latino Cambio
- Many to Many
- Mapping Strategy
- Naked Capitalism
- Network Weaving
- New Security Beat
- Open the Future
- Our World 2.0
- Owen Barder
- Oxfam’s From Poverty to Power
- Schneier on Security
- Silobreaker
- Small Precautions
- Small Wars Journal
- Steven Benen
- The Carpetbagger Report
- The Interpreter
- The Politics of Wellbeing
- The Strategist
- The Washington Note
- Worldometers
Tags
Afghanistan bailout banking crisis Belarus cholera Climate Change Crisis democracy dni emission cuts Finance Financial crisis Foreign policy FSB Georgia Iraq Islamic finance Lukashenko Medvedev Merkel mumbai National Security Strategy NATO Obama oil Pakistan Peacekeepers piracy poznan President Bush Putin Resilience Russia Secret services Somalia sovereign wealth funds terrorist attacks Thailand Thaksin transhumanism Twitter Ukraine wikipedia Zimbabwe-
Meta
- Since the end of the Cold War, the international landscape has been transformed.
- During the next 30 years, every aspect of human life will change at an unprecedented rate, throwing up new features, challenges and opportunities.
- The unprecedented transfer of wealth roughly from West to East now under way will continue for the foreseeable future.
- The formidable acceleration of information exchanges, the increased trade in goods and as well as the rapid circulation of individuals, have transformed our economic, social and political environment
- New players—Brazil, Russia, India and China will bring new stakes and rules of the game to the international high table.
- Increase in global population will put pressure on resources—particularly land, energy, food, and water—raising the spectre of scarcities emerging as demand outstrips supply.
- There are a set of interconnected set of threats and risks, including international terrorism, weapons of mass destruction, conflicts and failed states, pandemics, and trans-national crime.
- The Invisible Rope - January 4th, 2009
- Saturday's Map: Ocean Currents - January 4th, 2009
- The IDF's new weapons of war: Twitter and You Tube - December 31st, 2008
- Ten foreign policy predictions for 2009* - December 29th, 2008
- Top 10 books of 2008 - December 28th, 2008
- Mismatched risk perceptions - again
- Looking ahead: foreign policy reform in 2008
- Wu-Tang Clan nail political analysis: “Rambo was crazy!”
- Progressive Governance talk
- Climate change and the Security Council
The Seduction of Analysis
November 25, 2008 | Charlie Edwards | More on News, Off topic |
Do we need to call ‘time out’ on global risk analysis? The NIC report on global trends 2025 is one of a plethora of recent publications on global risks and security challenges from think tanks, Government departments, the defence community, NGOs, business, academia, and the media. Do we really need any more?
3 questions spring to mind:
1. Are we suffocating under the weight of all this analysis?
2. Should we consider having a period of consolidation and reflection?
3. Do we need a transformational shift from analysis to action?
How many times do we need to be told that:
Surely it is time to complement existing analytical work with some ideas for action or even, as someone suggested earlier, divert our focus to analysing potential ’solutions’ rather than identifying the same ‘problems’ time and again. Given the vast number of reports and papers in the system, surely now is the time to consider what improvements and upgrades can and need to be made to the global system in response to the myriad of issues the international community faces.
In order to do this we need to move away from the comfortable exercise of scene setting, describing the world around us and instead take a different approach. One simple way would be to look East and see what Indian & Chinese thinkers and academics are developing. Analysis obviously plays a crucial role in thinking through issues and in policy-making but the very process of analysis can be seductive; providing us with breathing space when we actually need to be pushing on and debilitating by creating ever greater complexity which can often lead to inaction.
In the words of the King:
A little less conversation, a little more action please
All this aggravation ain’t satisfactioning me
A little more bite and a little less bark
A little less fight and a little more spark






Right on. How about we actually hear some concrete plans for sustainable distribution of resources, ways to manage the Asian giants’ ascents, the reformation of international bodies to more ably cope with the coming of a multipolar world?
The sad thing is, all of this is out there on the electronic ether. But so little gets heard because of all the self-important ‘analysis’ from a thousand and one different bodies trying to justify their budgets.
Risk analysis is like audit. You have to keep doing it.
The idea that the world is so stable and linear that strategy need not be iterative is charming but anachronistic.
Nettie, You have missed the point completely. I am not suggesting that we stop it… I am asking for a ‘time out’ where we reflect on the analysis - we consider it, we compare and contrast with other reports… and from there we begin to think of potential answers and possible solutions - which frankly are sorely lacking…the latest of UK report (mentioning no names) suggests we need a Minister for Security Diplomacy - I mean what the f*** is security diplomacy?