Relaciones Internacionales – Comunicación Internacional

28 abril, 2026
por Felipe Sahagún
Sin comentarios

World Happiness Report 2026 (The Economist)

Last year I was a bridesmaid at my best friend’s wedding in Finland. It was a sunny day in a picturesque setting near the groom’s hometown, and a fitting destination for such a happy occasion: the country has topped the World Happiness Report for nine years running. (By comparison, English-speaking countries are increasingly miserable.)

Finland’s dominance owes something to how the UN-backed report measures happiness. Finns, as the groom explained to me, are reserved people, often found in the quiet solitude of their mökki (cottages). But when asked to score their lives out of ten, they give themselves a solid 7.76 on average—comfortably the highest score in the world. Like a good marriage, happiness need not be showy.

The world’s happiest country

The middle-aged are no longer the most miserable

How much happiness does money buy?

The world has become surprisingly less grumpy

Popular music is getting sadder and angstier

 

28 abril, 2026
por Felipe Sahagún
Sin comentarios

La XXX Cumbre Iberoamericana (Fundación Alternativas)

La XXX Cumbre Iberoamericana de Madrid de noviembre de 2026 marca un momento importante para España e Iberoamérica. En un presente internacional marcado por la fragmentación y la polarización, España asume por cuarta vez el reto de albergar una difícil Cumbre. La cita tiene lugar en un contexto de grave crisis del multilateralismo y disrupciones del orden internacional. Guerras comerciales y proteccionismo; crisis de la cooperación al desarrollo; proliferación de conflictos armados; o competición feroz entre el EEUU de Trump, China, Rusia, Europa y potencias emergentes.

Con la presentación del Informe Iberoamérica 2026 te invitamos a participar junto a expertos y actores de alto nivel en una conversación en Casa América en torno al sentido y el papel presente y futuro de Iberoamérica, así como la oportunidad estratégica para América Latina y para España, en tanto país anfitrión de la Cumbre. Abordaremos retos como la construcción de consensos en asuntos clave – digital, verde, o social – o en nuevas agendas de cooperación: migraciones y diásporas, fondos para desastres naturales, o políticas de cuidados.

Fundación Alternativas

27 abril, 2026
por Felipe Sahagún
Sin comentarios

Military spending in the world 2026 (SIPRI)

Trends in World Military Expenditure, 2025

Global military spending surged by almost 3% in 2025, fueled largely by ballooning defense expenditures in Europe and Asia, according to a report released Monday by a respected arms watchdog group.

European defense spending jumped 14% from 2024, to $864 billion, and in Asia-Oceania the increase was 8.1%, to $681 billion, the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI) said in its annual “Trends in World Military Expenditure” report.

Overall, almost $2.9 trillion was spent on military programs around the world in 2025, a 2.9% increase from a year earlier. The figure represents 2.5% of the world’s gross domestic product (GDP), the highest percentage since 2009, according to SIPRI.

The US, China, Russia, Germany and India were the biggest spenders, collectively accounting for 58% of the global sum.

…MORE

LINK to Report

DOWNLOAD FULL PUBLICATION

 

27 abril, 2026
por Felipe Sahagún
Sin comentarios

The Most Impactful U.S. Inventions (WSJ)

From the computer to the steamboat, WSJ readers ranked the country’s greatest breakthroughs. Here are the results.

“USA250: The Story of the World’s Greatest Economy” is a yearlong WSJ series examining America’s first 250 years. Read more about it from Editor in Chief Emma Tucker.

The votes are in. For the past three months, readers of The Wall Street Journal have ranked 60 U.S. inventions on their total impact on society. Those inventions ranged from the cotton gin to bluejeans, bypass surgery to the dishwasher, and, yes, even Post-it Notes.

Here are the 25 U.S. inventions with the greatest impact, according to those WSJ readers. Let the debate continue.

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Related

From the Telegraph to the Smartphone: How Information Technology Unified a Nation (WSJ)

 

 

26 abril, 2026
por Felipe Sahagún
Sin comentarios

White House correspondents’ dinner shooting

Imagen
 

I’ve covered Trump for a decade. At the White House correspondents’ dinner, darkness came viscerally close

in Washington
 
Sun 26 Apr 2026 12.00 CEST

Shocking. Unnerving. Unpredictable. Violent. For a decade I have been following the twists and turns of Donald Trump’s America with the privilege of journalistic distance. On Saturday night I felt the darkness come viscerally close.

Bang! Bang! What was that? Where was it? At 8.36pm panic and pandemonium reigned in the cavernous ballroom at the Washington Hilton hotel. There were men running and cries of “Get down!” and “Stay down!”

I saw guests at the White House Correspondents’ Association’s (WHCA) annual dinner – men in tuxedos, women in dresses – diving under the circular tables and I, almost as if acting on a cue, did likewise. It was a scene from a dozen Hollywood movies but now it was happening to me, right here, right now.

…MORE

Aquí los dos párrafos que me han interesado más del artículo:

Peter Doocy of Fox News asked why this keeps happening to Trump. The president cited Abraham Lincoln and said: “I’ve studied assassinations, and I must tell you, the most impactful people … the people that do the most, the people that make the biggest impact, they’re the ones that they go after.”

Which was not the real story. The past 10 years have witnessed a shooting at a congressional baseball practice, a deadly white supremacist march in Charlottesville, the January 6 insurrection at the US Capitol and the killings of the former Minnesota house speaker Melissa Hortman and her husband and the rightwing activist Charlie Kirk. Political violence is rampant and on Saturday, in a fancy Washington ballroom, Trump and the media glimpsed the edge of the abyss.

Related

What we know about gunfire at White House correspondents’ dinner (BBC)

In his alleged manifestoCole Allen, the man accused of targeting the White House correspondents’ dinner, called himself a “Friendly Federal Assassin” and created a list of targets for the shooting, formatted from highest to lowest priority, with Trump administration officials at the top, according to a report from the New York Post.

The manifesto, obtained by the Post, begins with apologies to those who knew the suspect and lists his motives for the shooting. It said the shooter targeted administration officials with the exception of FBI director Kash Patel.

“I am a citizen of the United States of America,” it said. “What my representatives do reflects on me. And I am no longer willing to permit a pedophile, rapist, and traitor to coat my hands with his crimes.”

The Guardian 19.06 CEST