
Alan Cafruny, the Henry Platt Bristol Chair of International Affairs and Professor of Government, recently participated in a panel discussion focused on “polycrisis, global crisis, sanction regimes, and power shifts under Team Trump Two (TTT).”
The panel was part of a workshop titled “Polycrisis & Power-Shifts under Team Trump Two (TTT): Re-fashioning Eurasia & the Greater Middle East.” The workshop, led by the Centre for the Study of States, Markets & People (STAMP), explored global shifts in power and politics. STAMP is part of the University of East London’s Royal Docks School of Business and Law, which hosted the event.
The event featured researchers, academics, and students from the U.K., Europe, and the U.S. who discussed topics related to “political and economic instability, shifting alliances and global power dynamics, sanction regimes, NATO, energy, and the future of international cooperation.”
According to its webpage, the Centre for the Study of States, Markets & People is described as “an inter-disciplinary research centre … [with] a global focus [that] examines the theory and practice of global and European enterprises and their corresponding forms of governance at macro and micro levels. It extends to areas of law, critical marketing and money studies, global geo-politics, conflict and international security … [as] key pillars for a safe economic and sustainable environment free of geopolitical tensions and conflict.”