- Global Risks Report 2025 | World Economic Forum
The Global Risks Report 2025 analyses global risks to support decision-makers in balancing current crises and longer-term priorities
- 5 ways GDP gets it totally wrong as a measure of our success
The beauty of gross domestic product is its single figure It squishes all of human activity into a couple of digits, like a frog jammed into a matchbox But this condensing is also GDP’s flaw
- Why art has the power to change the world | World Economic Forum
Davos 2016: The arts and culture represent one of the few areas in our society where people can come together to share an experience even if they see the world in radically different ways, argues Olafur Eliasson
- 6 ways social media is changing the world | World Economic Forum
Our growing love of social media is not just changing the way we communicate – it’s changing the way we do business, the way we are governed, and the way we live in society And it’s doing so at breakneck speed Here are six observations and predictions for the way social media is changing the world from experts from the Global Agenda Council
- World Economic Forum Annual Meeting
World leaders from government, business, civil society and academia will convene in Davos to engage in forward-looking discussions to address global issues and set priorities The call for bold collective action makes the meeting particularly relevant
- Gen Z will take a values-driven approach to cybersecurity
Organizations must adapt to embrace the more sustainable, borderless and values-driven cybersecurity future that is being driven by the rise of Gen Z
- Video games are transforming how we communicate with each other - and . . .
Video games can connect people of all backgrounds and beliefs Their ability to build community could make them a larger force for social good
- Alzheimer’s disease: 8 recent breakthroughs | World Economic Forum
Of the 57 million people living with dementia worldwide, 60-70% are thought to have Alzheimer’s From AI diagnoses to new drugs, here are some of the recent breakthroughs in the battle against the disease InBrain, a World Economic Forum 2025 Technology Pioneer, has developed an ultra-thin graphene implant that could help people with Alzheimer’s
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