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51. Conflict in Two Theaters? European Misperceptions about the Asia-Pacific

52. What If the EU Did Not Share Data to Protect Its Critical Infrastructure?

53. Economic Equidistance is Not an Option: Germany and the US-Chinese Geo-Economic Conflict

54. How To Talk About Migration in Africa: Classic Hurdles and Six Recommendations for European Policymakers

55. NATO’s 2030 Reflection Process and the New Strategic Concept: Implications for the Security in Northern Europe

56. Britain, Germany, and the Rise of Competitive Virtue Signaling

57. Japan's "Economic Security" Measures

58. Promoting the Euro – Countering Secondary Sanctions: Germany Should Push to Complete Monetary Union

59. If Russia Uses Migration as a Weapon, Europeans Should Respond In Kind

60. Risky Thinking: How Scenarios Can Help the EU Bounce Back from Strategic Shock

61. Defense and Deterrence Against Geo-Economic Coercion What Germany and the EU Can Learn from China and the United States

62. Designing a Geo-Economic Policy for Europe

63. Sea Change for Europe’s Security Order: Three Future Scenarios

64. The Economics of Great Power Competition: Why Germany Must Step Up on Defense

65. Using Information to Influence the Russian War in Ukraine

66. Sanctions Against Russia: Five Lessons from the Case of Iran

67. Defining Feminist Foreign Policy in Germany’s National Security Strategy

68. Don’t Panic! How to Give Germany’s Crisis Management Strategic Footing

69. China’s Global Vision Vacuum: An Opportunity and Challenge for Europe

70. The Geopolitics of Digital Technology Innovation: Assessing Strengths and Challenges of Germany’s Innovation Ecosystem

71. Integrating Climate in Germany’s National Security Strategy: How to Avoid Being Derailed by Russia’s Aggression

72. Russia’s Strategic Interests and Actions in the Baltic Region

73. Russian Foreign Policy in 2020: Strengthening Multi-vectorialism

74. Good Practices in Risk Assessment for Terrorist Offenders

75. Europe’s Capacity to Act in the Global Tech Race: Charting a Path for Europe in Times of Major Technological Disruption

76. Ghana as the EU’s Migration Partner: Actors, Interests, and Recommendations for European Policymakers

77. The Logic (and Grammar) of US Grand Strategy: Implications for Germany and Europe

78. The New Geo-Economic Environment and the EU’s Capacity to Act

79. Walking a Tightrope in Tunisia: The Aspirations and Limitations of Migration Policy Reform

80. Building European Resilience and Capacity to Act: Lessons for 2030

81. Cooperation in Tertiary Prevention of Islamist Extremism

82. Migration Policy in South Africa: Lessons from Africa’s Migration Magnet for European Policymakers

83. Egypt, the EU, and Migration: An Uncomfortable Yet Unavoidable Partnership

84. Germany’s Debt Brake and Europe’s Fiscal Stance after COVID-19

85. The Use of Games in Strategic Foresight: A Warning from the Future

86. Rule of Law Diplomacy: Why the EU Needs to Become More Vocal in Georgia, Moldova, and Ukraine

87. After the OECD-Deal: Transatlantic Cooperation and International Corporate Tax Reform

88. The Hidden G2 for Democratic Tech Governance is the EU-US Relationship: A Starter Kit

89. Three Ideas to Improve the International Role of the ECB

90. A Capable EU Is No Utopia: Strategic Lessons from the German Presidency

91. Blurry Counterterrorism: A Chance for Russia, A Risk for Europe

92. Germany Between a Rock and a Hard Place in China-US Competition

93. To the Viktor Go the Spoils: What Orbán Needs to Form a New Political Camp in Europe

94. Assessing China and Russia’s Influence on the German Parliamentary Elections

95. Quantifying Investment Facilitation at Country Level: Introducing a New Index

96. Three Scenarios for Europe’s Conflict Landscape in 2030

97. The Role of Space as a Global Common Good for Critical Infrastructure and Industry

98. Promoting Technological Sovereignty and Innovation: Emerging and Disruptive Technologies

99. Strategic Foresight and the EU Cyber Threat Landscape in 2025

100. Migration, Borders, and the EU’s Capacity to Act