Worldview is the international affairs TV programme that brings you the news and views that other networks can't or won't tell you about.
Presented by The Henry Jackson Society’s Executive Director, Alan Mendoza, it was screened weekly on the 18 Doughty Street Talk TV networkbetween October 2006 and November 2007.
Previous programmes can be seen by clicking the relevant archive link below.
WORLDVIEW ARCHIVE:
Onward to Annapolis: Can the Middle East Peace Conference Deliver?
Saudi Arabia: Friend or Foe of the West?
Russia’s Great Unknown: Will Putin let go of power?
Japan's Political Crisis: Was Shinzo Abe the symptom or the cause?
Hugo Chavez: Saint or Sinner?
Countering Nuclear Proliferation: Is the North Korean experience the model to follow?
The Petraeus Report: What does the report mean for the future of Britain and Iraq
Endangered Species: Can international action make a difference to their conservation?
Burma: Is it time to call time on the junta?
The US Presidential Election 2008: Who are the runners and riders?
Pakistan: Can President Musharraf continue to walk the tightrope?
National and international security policy: Is An Unquiet World the correct formula?
Iraq: Are we winning the military battle but losing the political will?
China and Hong Kong: Ten years on
Hamas in Gaza: Crisis or opportunity?
The EU Reform Treaty: Good, bad or ugly?
Arise Sir Salman: To what extent should international opinion influence domestic decision-making?
Energy Security: Does the free world need it and can it be attained?
Tony Blair: The foreign policy legacy
Putin's Russia: Yeltsin's legacy?
UK-US Foreign Policy: Are we losing the freedom of choice?
Iran: What was behind the hostage crisis?
Kosovo: Are we finally moving to the end game?
Zimbabwe: Beginning of an end for Mr Mugabe?
The World in 2007: No more turning away
The European Union: Economic burden or benefit for the UK?
Our work is only possible through the generosity of private philanthropy. If you support our mission and values and would like to contribute to our work, please click below.
A report on the conduct of the Afghanistan War and paths to future success.
© 2010 The Henry Jackson Society, Project for Democratic Geopolitics. All rights reserved.
Web Design by Byte Art