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The Next 100 Years is a 2009 speculative nonfiction book by George Friedman. In the book, Friedman attempts to predict the major geopolitical events and trends of the 21st century. Friedman also speculates in the book on changes in technology and culture that may take place during this period.
Friedman conceptualizes America's successful management of world affairs not by directly enforcing countries, but by creating competing relationships, which offset one another, in the world's different regions. For example, in the past, Iraq balanced Iran, and currently Japan balances China. Friedman asserts this is the decade where the US as a ...
Friedman asserts this is the decade where the U.S. as a power must mature to manage its power and balance as an empire and republic. [ 10 ] [ 11 ] Friedman's latest book, The Storm Before the Calm: America's Discord, the Coming Crisis of the 2020s, and the Triumph Beyond, was released in 2020 by Doubleday.
Friedman has gone on to author further predictive works, including the 2009 book The Next 100 Years: A Forecast for the 21st Century and the 2011 book The Next Decade: Where We’ve Been . . . and Where We’re Going. [30] In the former book, Friedman again predicts a war between the United States and Japan, this time occurring in the 2050s.
The first nineteen books in the series were written by Gertrude Chandler Warner, the series's original author. Subsequent books were written by others after her death in 1979. Subsequent books were written by others after her death in 1979.
Pamela Sargent and George Zebrowski November 1997 0-671-00237-6: 84 Assignment: Eternity: Greg Cox January 1998 0-671-00117-5: 85 Republic (My Brother's Keeper, Book 1) Michael Jan Friedman December 1998 0-671-01914-7: 86 Constitution (My Brother's Keeper, Book 2) 0-671-01919-8: 87 Enterprise [vi] (My Brother's Keeper, Book 3) January 1999
Georges Philippe Friedmann (French:; 13 May 1902 – 15 November 1977), was a French sociologist and philosopher, known for his influential work on the effects of industrial labor on individuals and his criticisms of the uncontrolled embrace of technological change in twentieth-century Europe and the United States.
Not So Free to Choose: The Political Economy of Milton Friedman and Ronald Reagan Praeger, 1987; attacks Friedman's policies from the left online version Roy, Subroto, "Milton Friedman, A Man of Reason (1912–2006)", Obituary in The Statesman newspaper Perspective Page, www.thestatesman.net, November 22, 2006, also available at http ...