Globalization and cooperation top draw of populism in WEF poll
The poll's findings ran counter to the well-publicized sound and fury of dozens of populist leaders or political parties.
The U.S. is a major global power and a permanent member of the U.N. Security Council. It is a founding member of NATO and a key participant in a vast network of international organizations, including the G-7, G-20, OECD, and World Bank. It is currently re-evaluating its alliances and relationships, particularly with China and Russia, while also engaging in diplomatic efforts to end the Ukraine war and addressing new trade tensions with key partners like India.
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The poll's findings ran counter to the well-publicized sound and fury of dozens of populist leaders or political parties.
The global financial institution has acknowledged difficulties in assessing the problem among developing nations.
António Guterres urged more diplomacy, climate ambition, technology uses, and focus on the U.N.'s 17 Global Goals.
In a ceremonial handover, the Palestinian president assumed the chairmanship of the Group of 77 major bloc of U.N. votes.
Despite the exclusivity of Davos, WEF will focus on climate, inequality and international cooperation and inclusiveness.
The two organizations say far more global funding is needed to end HIV, tuberculosis and malaria epidemics by 2030.
Not surprisingly, the patterns of American and European leadership have been an affront to non-Western nations.
Despite co-founding the U.N. agency as a peace-promoting organization, the U.S. has now withdrawn from it two times.
The Trump administration's broadsides embolden nations with poor rights records and encourage attacks on journalists.
Huge security threats loom from the crisis in Yemen to Afghanistan's fighting to the U.S.-China trade war.
Japan will leave the International Whaling Commission, which will drop to 88 members, and resume whaling in April.
The strikes are not affiliated with any political party but support international organizations seeking emissions cuts.
The non-binding deal tries to solve some of the polarizing but age-old issues surrounding people crossing borders.
In the past year at least 80 journalists were killed, 348 were detained in prison and 60 were taken as hostages.
The effort accompanied a similar pact for migration that the U.N. General Assembly also approved this month.
Negotiators overcame a deadlock on a crucial element about how nations must report their greenhouse gas emissions.