Relaciones Internacionales – Comunicación Internacional

21 enero, 2025
por Felipe Sahagún
Sin comentarios

The challenges that journalists will face in 2025

The media developments surrounding Donald Trump’s inauguration showed some of the challenges that journalists will face in the year ahead – from online attacks and an unstable platform environment to the risks posed by strategic litigation and an audience increasingly tempted to avoid the newsA new episode of our podcast looks at how news publishers see some of these challenges and how they are planning to meet them in the year ahead.

This newsletter also includes a chart from our report on media trends, a piece on journalism in Burkina Faso and a new project from one of our Journalist Fellows on how journalists can improve their reporting on the ‘just transition’, a term that defines an idea as important as poorly understood. Keep in mind that applications are now open for our Journalist Fellowship. You’ll find everything you need to know in this link.

Eduardo Suárez
Head of Editorial, Reuters Institute

Related

OUR PODCAST
How newsrooms will meet the challenges of 2025

A horizontal bar chart showing where publishers plan to put more and less effort in 2025. It shows publishers are planning to put the most effort into AI tools and visual social platforms and the least effort into X.

FROM OUR REPORT ON MEDIA TRENDS

More work with AI partners and visual platforms. Publishers expect to put more effort into working with generative AI companies such as OpenAI and Perplexity, and into video-based social media platforms like YouTube and TikTok, according to our survey of over 300 media leaders worldwide. Publishers plan to put the least effort into X, as more journalists leave the platform and those remaining receive less engagement. | Read the report

How reporters in Burkina Faso keep reporting under attack

How journalists can improve their reporting on a key climate news story: the ‘just transition’ 

EXPLORE OUR INSIGHTS ON…

Misinformation · Climate journalism · AI and journalism · Social media

 

21 enero, 2025
por Felipe Sahagún
Sin comentarios

Business and geopolitics

McKinsey's Davos Daily

Business leaders today view geopolitical tensions as the biggest risk to economic growth. With regional conflicts and trade disputes intensifying in recent years, multinational corporations face a challenging environment. Leaders acknowledge the shifting global order, yet many haven’t fully grasped a crucial implication: these geopolitical shifts create not only risks to mitigate but also significant opportunities. “Organizations must have insight, foresight, oversight, and the right capabilities—but most of all, they must have the fortitude to seize opportunities amid volatility, complexity, and uncertainty,” write McKinsey’s Cindy Levy, Shubham Singhal, and Matt Watters. As day one at Davos kicks off, check out these insights to learn why a proactive approach to geopolitics is essential—and why resilience must become a core strategic priority rather than a reactive afterthought.

A proactive approach to navigating geopolitics is essential to thrive

The Global Cooperation Barometer 2025

Building geopolitical resilience: The people agenda

Tariffs on the move? A guide for CEOs for 2025 and beyond

Can your company remain global and if so, how?

 

20 enero, 2025
por Felipe Sahagún
Sin comentarios

El mundo según Trump

 
 
Trump 2.0: el mundo visto como un gran Monopoly
EL MUNDO@elmundoes
«En la segunda era del republicano, el planeta deja de ser el tradicional tablero geopolítico y se convierte en una lucha por el control de la riqueza». Felipe Sahagún

De elmundo.es

20 enero, 2025
por Felipe Sahagún
Sin comentarios

Billionaires’ wealth soared in 2024 (OXFAM)

Green Oxfam sign with logo

The group’s report comes as some of the world’s political and financial elite prepare for an annual gathering in Davos, Switzerland.

20 Jan 2025

Billionaires’ wealth globally grew three times faster in 2024 than the year before, global advocacy group Oxfam International says, as some of the world’s political and financial elite prepare to attend an annual gathering in Davos, Switzerland.

In its latest assessment of global inequality timed to the opening of the World Economic Forum (WEF) meeting, Oxfam on Monday said the combined wealth of billionaires rose by $2 trillion to $15 trillion last year.

The report, titled Takers Not Makers, said there were 2,769 billionaires worldwide in 2024, an increase of 204 over the previous year. It noted that at least four new billionaires were “minted” every week during the year, and three-fifths of billionaire wealth came from inheritance, monopoly power or “crony connections”.

Oxfam predicted that at least five trillionaires will crop up over the next decade. A year ago, the group forecast that only one trillionaire would appear in that period.

…MORE