PODCAST · news
This Week in the World with Jaden Jefferson
by Jaden Jefferson Reports
Geopolitics, climate change, challenges to the future of liberal democracy, and how a changing world order intersects with a changing global economy. Each week, host Jaden Jefferson discusses them all — alongside expert voices in international relations, history, science, and economics — for insight into where our world is now, as well as its future.
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This Week in the World: In the U.S.-Israel war with Iran, who blinks first?
There is no shortage of political and economic incentive for the U.S. to end its war in Iran — but that doesn't mean it'll be over anytime soon. On 'This Week in the World,' I discuss those incentives, and the larger political picture, with Dr. Joel Voss, an associate professor of political science at the University of Toledo.
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10
This Week in the World: U.S.-Iran talks (?) and Lebanon in focus
This Week in the World: Conflicting narratives about whether the U.S. and Iran will be negotiating, this weekend, in Pakistan + details on the latest killing of a journalist, by an Israeli airstrike, in Lebanon.
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9
This Week in the World: Hungarian election results, 50 days of the war in Iran
This Week in the World: A look back at last week's Hungarian election, which led to a landslide victory for the country's opposition party. Plus, the latest on the U.S.-Israel war with Iran, now in day 50.
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8
This Week in the World: Russia, Ukraine, the U.S., and a changing world order
Dr. Ronald Suny is a renowned professor emeritus, of both history and political science, at the University of Michigan and University of Chicago. He joins This Week in the World to discuss the Russia-Ukraine war's current impacts — and its long-term implications.
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7
This Week in the World: Trump's speech on war in Iran + war in Ukraine update
Today on This Week in the World: Dissecting President Trump's formal address regarding the U.S.-Israeli war in Iran — over a month after it began — plus, an update on Russia's ongoing war in Ukraine.
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This Week in the World: The global oil market
The Strait of Hormuz, an artery in the global oil trade, is effectively closed by the U.S.-Israel war with Iran. This week in the world, an interview with Patrick De Haan, GasBuddy's head of petroleum analysis, who provided his insight into the impact.
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5
This Week in the World: Former political prisoner of Iran on the prospect of 'regime change'
On 'This Week in the World,' an interview with Iranian-American scholar & democracy activist Kian Tajbakhsh, who — from 2009 to 2016 — was a political prisoner in Iran. He provides his perspective on the country's past, present, and possible future.
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This Week in the World: The implications of U.S.-Israeli strikes in Iran
Two weeks since U.S.-Israeli strikes on Iran began — marking the start of a new Middle East war — this week in the world, I'm sitting down with Dr. Camron Amin, professor of Middle East and Iranian diaspora studies at the University of Michigan-Dearborn.
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3
This Week in the World: The global climate change response and U.S. role in it
The Trump administration has significantly scaled back the federal government's response to climate change. So what does that mean — not only for the U.S. — but countries around the globe? This week in the world, a conversation with Julie McNamara from the Union of Concerned Scientists.
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2
This Week in the World: Cuba in Context
Since 1960, a trade embargo has been in place between the U.S. and Cuba. And as of late last month, Cuba is also alienated from its only allies, due to a U.S.-imposed fuel blockade.So, as Cuba's authoritarian government grows ever more vulnerable, what could the future hold?This week in the world, Sebastián Arcos – interim director of the Cuban Research Institute at Florida International University – offers his perspective.
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This Week in the World: Press freedom threats, European security, & a bridge dispute
On the inaugural edition of This Week in the World: Katherine Jacobsen, from the Committee to Protect Journalists, discusses global threats to press freedom. Ian Kelly, former U.S. ambassador to Georgia, shares his thoughts on Europe's self-defense abilities. And, a new hiccup in the U.S.-Canada relationship.
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ABOUT THIS SHOW
Geopolitics, climate change, challenges to the future of liberal democracy, and how a changing world order intersects with a changing global economy. Each week, host Jaden Jefferson discusses them all — alongside expert voices in international relations, history, science, and economics — for insight into where our world is now, as well as its future.
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Jaden Jefferson Reports
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