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Title: Imagined Futures: competing visions, power games
Approx. Reading Time: 9 minutes
Author: Peter Kingsley

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Imagined Futures: competing visions, power games

The common assumption is that imagination is individual and private. The more important question, argues Peter Kingsley, is the role of the cultural and collective imagination, which dominates everything from geostrategic security to climate action and technological innovation. Imagined futures are cultural realities that shape decisions in the here and now. They are primary drivers of war, conflict, competition and finance. The deeper questions are: who sets the agenda, and whose future is imagined?

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Briefing

Food Localisation Moves Forward

The move to produce more of our food closer to home is growing all over the world. Instigated by governments at a national level and from the grassroots-up in small rural and city communities, it is supported by a flow of technological innovations that make local and small-scale food production viable.

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War and the Law of Unintended Consequences

As the saying goes, wars are easy to start but hard to win. Israel and the US have scored a tactical success, but turning it into lasting security will be difficult. Iran has lost this battle but will do all it can to avoid losing the war. Second- and third-order effects will ripple through the global system, impacting growth, geopolitical tensions and stability.

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Has the Dollar Been Trumped?

Foreigners were long relaxed about putting capital into dollar assets, believing that US Treasuries were risk-free, that the Federal Reserve would remain free of political interference and always able to act as the global lender of last resort, and that US assets would deliver superior returns. Trump’s second administration challenges each of these assumptions.

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Garden of Forking Paths: lessons in imagined futures

From the archive: Jorge Luis Borges’ 1941 short story Garden of Forking Pathsmay seem an unusual metaphor for state-of-the-art approaches to simulating and navigating complex systems in 2023, but the story has credentials. Borges echoed Heisenberg’s uncertainty principle and both foreshadowed the ‘many worlds’ theories and the recent ‘simulation’ model of neuroscience that explains the realities of human experience and how we think about the future.

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Long Read Overview

Title: Climate and Financial Futures
Approx. Reading Time: 8 minutes
Author: Peter Kingsley

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Climate and Financial Futures

Five years ago, the ‘inevitable policy response’ narrative on dangerous climate risk had momentum. The narrative ran that, in the face of increasingly extreme climate events and overwhelming evidence, large-scale state interventions were a question not of ‘if’, but of ‘when’. Since then, wars and chaotic changes in the world order have dominated the landscape. Peter Kingsley asks what happens when some regions and cities recognise they will become uninhabitable and uninsurable, and when investment confidence amongst ultimate asset owners, private capital and states collapses?

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Long Read Overview

Title: Renaissance: towards 2050
Approx. Reading Time: 31 minutes
Author: Peter Kingsley, Simon Tilford

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Renaissance: towards 2050

Picture this: January 2050. Peter Kingsley and Simon Tilford invite us to look back—to 2028, to the moment when, after years of crisis, the focus on long-term resilience and regeneration of the natural world gained momentum. To a time that marked the beginning of mass-scale global action to reverse the decades of industrial destruction and the ecological disasters that followed. Global humanitarian values began to shape agendas as mass-migration became irreversible. Hope was in the air after years of relentless crises, trade wars and military conflict. Climate populism, legal activism and cultural convergence focused on the transformation of natural habitats and have reshaped global politics, economies, technology and finance. In just one generation, the world’s geostrategic and environmental landscape is now transformed.

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Long Read Overview

Title: Walled Gardens: towards 2050
Approx. Reading Time: 36 minutes

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Walled Gardens: towards 2050

January 2050. Peter Kingsley and Simon Tilfordinvite us to look back. Survey a world of patchwork, environmentally secure post-industrial walled gardens. Secure borders for some, mass-migration and survival conditions for others. The climate and biosphere crises had global causes, but hyper-local solutions. The long political backlash against globalisation shaped the emergence of isolationism, protectionism and state power. What remains of trade is in ideas: digital, virtual, fragmented.

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Long Read Overview

Title: Dark Ages: towards 2050
Approx. Reading Time: 46 minutes
Author: Peter Kingsley, Simon Tilford

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Dark Ages: towards 2050

Scenarios are models. They describe alternative possible futures. At their best, they explore extremes, because history tells us one thing about the future: failure of imagination is a primary source of risk and catastrophic failure. In this update of Dark Ages, one of our reference scenarios, Peter Kingsley and Simon Tilford explore a descent into chaos, a story of climate and biosphere collapse, war, state failures, economic crisis, mass migration and humanitarian disasters. A story of sleepwalking world leaders. Too little, too late. Like Orwell’s 1984, it serves as a warning, not a prediction. This story has momentum. Is this the world we want?

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Briefing

Decision-making in Conditions of Radical Policy Uncertainty

The current geopolitical moment is what statisticians call a “structural break”. It is rendering the forecasting models used by central banks, financial institutions and specialised firms largely useless. How should decision makers adjust to the global hegemon, predominant economic power and holder of the global reserve currency generating so much uncertainty?

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Trump and the End of US Economic Outperformance

Financial markets may not force the Trump administration to adopt a responsible economic policy agenda. Nor can the US economy flourish irrespective of the direction of the country’s politics. Many of its economic strengths are the product of political decisions and institutions that are now under threat. As a result, the days of US outperformance could be numbered.

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Compound Uncertainty

According to the latest neuroscientific research, humans create models of the world and then scan for sources of shock. We are fine-tuned to minimise surprise and uncertainty. We simulate possible futures. There is, however, a fundamental problem. What works for individuals does not work at larger scales. This matters: the greatest challenges to humanity are global and collective. Unless and until we imagine new models, we face ever-increasing uncertainty.

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Early Warning of Climate Tipping Points

The UK’s Advanced Research Agency (ARIA) has announced a major investment in early warning systems for climate tipping points. Such systems could spur the rapid decarbonisation needed, but with global temperatures breaching 1.5°C above pre-industrial levels sooner than expected, it is probably too late to prevent some tipping points being triggered. As a result, early warning systems also have an essential role to play in enabling preparation for the worst.

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Europe Awakening?

Trump’s destructive and hostile policies are galvanising Europe, prompting claims that the euro could challenge the dollar as the world’s reserve asset. However, for this to happen the eurozone would need to integrate fiscally as well as become a net capital importer, which implies running a trade deficit. This could happen, but probably not quickly.

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Are We in a ‘Delayed Disclosure Trap’?

Institutional risk assessments are grossly under-estimating climate risk. The world is on a trajectory for over 3°C of warming, yet many assessments assume this will have a negligible effect on economic growth and asset values. This is creating a ‘delayed disclosure trap’—the disincentive to disclose high climate risks leads to less action, so the underlying risk grows. Breaking the trap can only be achieved by defending first movers.

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American Business Leaders and Trump: the tragedy of collective action

American businesses face the conundrum of collective action. The second Trump administration is likely to end badly for many of them—as well as the entire US—but no leader dares speak up. The longer they remain silent, the more damage could be done to the institutions of US democracy, and the harder and riskier it will be for them to push back.

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Mind the Gender Gap

In the recent US election, there was a 16-point difference in voting behaviour between young men and women, with men under 30 backing Trump by 56 percent compared to just 40 percent of women the same age. No other age group had such a pronounced “gender gap” in their voting behaviour. Other countries are seeing similar trends. The societal implications could be far-reaching.

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Trump’s First 40 Days

The liberal media and the courts are the only ones hitting back against the Trump administration. The Democrats have yet to recover their footing. There has been some bipartisan pushback against his U-turn on Ukraine and embrace of Putin, but not as much as would have been expected given the ramifications. Nevertheless, Trump faces mounting challenges. Economics could be his downfall.

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Will Putin Cut His Losses in Ukraine?

Three years after the start of Russia’s war against Ukraine, a cessation of hostilities is in sight—prompted by Donald Trump’s determination to relieve the financial burden of US military aid by seeking a quick end to the conflict. As negotiations start in earnest between Russia and the US, Vladimir Putin must decide how long he wants to keep fighting.

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Trump, Tariffs and Trade: breaking up is hard to do

The phrase ‘decoupling from the US’ rolls off the tongue easily. In reality, it is more complex, involving what economists call a “fallacy of composition”. It may be possible for one or even a few countries to shift some trade away from the US, but very difficult for all to do so simultaneously due to the country’s centrality to the global economy and the exceptional role of the US consumer.

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Trump’s Davos

In its 55 years of existence, the World Economic Forum (WEF) Annual Meeting in Davos has never seen one single individual dominating discussions like Donald Trump did this year. Even though the US President wasn’t there in person, it was all about him. His deregulatory agenda was feted by business leaders, but what he envisages is the law of the jungle, where the big end up eating the small. This promises further fragmentation and chaos.

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The LA Wildfires: uncharted territory for climate politics

While the January 2025 LA wildfires were exceptional in their speed and severity, less attention has been paid to an important political dynamic: how the failure to protect communities through adaptation and emergency response can increase support for political parties that seek to curtail climate action. As such, the ability to spur decarbonisation and tackle the causes of climate change could become increasingly dependent on whether political leaders are also perceived as capable in responding to its consequences.

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Briefing

AI, Global Power Competition

Artificial intelligence (AI) is a primary global power battlefield. The landscape is defined by ever-greater momentum, conflicting signals and turbulence, as the recent emergence of DeepSeek and the collapse of US share prices illustrate. The deep-seated tensions between ‘AI for good’ and what some experts see as existential risks posed by unregulated AI, social media, quantum computing and Big Tech, led by the US, are polarising governments, academic experts, corporate leaders and financial markets.

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Briefing

UK—Splendid Isolation?

For some, the election of Donald Trump highlights the need for the UK to rejoin the EU as quickly as possible. For others, it’s an opportunity for Britain to carve out a privileged relationship with a booming US. For their part, British voters increasingly want closer EU ties, but they are largely being ignored by the country’s politicians. The risk is that the UK ends up with worst of all worlds.

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A ‘Doom Loop’ Threatens Collective Climate Action

The consequences of climate change are weakening societies’ abilities to respond to its causes and impact, leading to ‘derailment risk’. Adaptation is sometimes misconstrued as coming at the cost of addressing the underlying problem—mitigation. However, as climate consequences escalate, adaptation will be an essential enabler of mitigation: more resilient and cohesive societies will be better able to see out the transition, no matter what climate change throws their way.

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