『Brian Crombie Radio Hour - Epi 1663 - A New World Order: AI, Geopolitics, and Canada’s Place in a Changing Global System』のカバーアート

Brian Crombie Radio Hour - Epi 1663 - A New World Order: AI, Geopolitics, and Canada’s Place in a Changing Global System

Brian Crombie Radio Hour - Epi 1663 - A New World Order: AI, Geopolitics, and Canada’s Place in a Changing Global System

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On The Brian Crombie Hour, Brian explores how rapidly shifting global dynamics are reshaping geopolitics, technology, and national strategy in the twenty-first century.He is joined by Belgian transformation strategist Joe Coudron, author of End the System and Other Bad Ideas for the Future, for a wide-ranging discussion on Europe’s evolving role in a new era of global uncertainty.Coudron argues that the world is entering a fundamentally different geopolitical phase—one in which long-standing assumptions about trade, security, and cooperation are being replaced by a focus on resilience and self-reliance. As the United States and China increasingly prioritize their own strategic interests, Europe is accelerating efforts to build greater independence in energy, technology, manufacturing, and defence.Together, they explore Europe’s push toward energy independence, technological sovereignty, and strengthened defence capabilities, as well as the rapid pace at which these changes are unfolding.The conversation then turns to Canada’s position in this emerging global order. Brian and Coudron examine whether Canada can continue to rely heavily on traditional trade relationships, or whether it must diversify its economic and geopolitical partnerships. They also discuss the strategic importance of securing domestic capabilities in areas such as energy, critical minerals, artificial intelligence, cloud infrastructure, and data governance.A key focus of the discussion is the growing role of artificial intelligence in global power dynamics, including the possibility that access to advanced AI systems may increasingly be shaped by geography and national policy—raising new questions about technological sovereignty and security.In closing, Brian reflects on the broader shift underway in international relations: from globalization driven by interdependence to a new era defined by resilience and strategic autonomy. For Canada, he suggests, the central question is no longer only about participation in the global economy, but about which capabilities must be maintained at home to ensure long-term stability and strength.A timely and forward-looking conversation about power, technology, and Canada’s place in an increasingly uncertain world.
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