Future Forward

December 12, 2024

We are honored at The Ideas Letter to feature an interview with the highly regarded Bulgarian political scientist Ivan Krastev by the acclaimed Mexican journalist Carlos Bravo Regidor. For Krastev, the politics of identity has obscured a far more existential question: the politics of demography. Reflecting on a wide range of issues, Krastev addresses how the world is shaping up in this Gramscian interregnum moment. 

Alexander Etkind, a historian currently teaching at the Central European University in Vienna, has written in recent years on the perilous interplay of authoritarianism, climate politics, and hydrocarbons. His highly original theses are in full flower in this commissioned piece. 

In our curated section, we have featured the thinking of C.L.R. James once or twice before but one can never get enough. In the APSR, Antonio Y. Vázquez-Arroyo looks squarely at James’ conception of the Enlightenment in his masterwork The Black Jacobins and works to reinstate a dialectical case for it. 

Then, Beatriz Silva excavates an unlikely pairing: the literary critic and public intellectual par excellence Edward Said and his relationship to the brilliant, blind-spotted liberal Isaiah Berlin.

Ahmed W. Waheed and Mahnoor Malik follow with a careful survey of international relations literature in Pakistan and the extent to which it remains beholden to conventional Western theoretical approaches.

Sociologist Holly Jean Buck of the University of Buffalo confects a concept she calls para-environmentalism, a way of seeing the environment shot through with misinterpretations. But the seeds of its own contradictions may lie within.

Last, a recent essay from the Cambridge Journal of Economics that problematizes the apparent successes in the UK government of the behavioralist nudge approach made famous by Cass Sunstein and Richard Thaler.

The holidays are upon us: The next issue of our fortnightly publication will be on Jan. 9.

Our musical selection for this thirtieth issue of The Ideas Letter comes from where I am writing this week: Warsaw. Krzysztof Komeda should be a global household name as he is here. The great pianist wrote scores for Roman Polanski films and was a trailblazer in the Polish avant-garde. His 1965 LP Astigmatic is a landmark in the European jazz scene. Here is the title track.

—Leonard Benardo, senior vice president at the Open Society Foundations