Happy New Year—and thank you for being part of The Signal’s global community of more than 250,000 readers. We’re very glad to have you with us.
In the coming months, you’ll notice some changes and additions to our coverage—as we develop our newsletter, revamp our website, and expand our membership offering.
We began The Signal to meet our shared need to understand the world from beyond ideological camps—in a way that does justice to its complexities and our curiosity.
Which is why everything we do starts with good questions—and every answer we find leads us to more of them. It’s an approach you’ll see at the heart of everything you read, hear, and watch from The Signal—throughout the year and into the future.
—Hywel Mills
What’s on our minds?
From pivotal elections and conflicts to transformative advances in technology and science, 2024 will be a year of dynamic change and ongoing uncertainty.
Some of the themes we’re thinking about as we look ahead …
Ehud Neuhaus
Challenges of the new economy
Generated visions
How is AI changing the global economy? Daron Acemoglu on the hype and reality of a potentially transformative technology.
Downtime
How bad is the American economy? Claudia Sahm on jobs, inflation, and the range of alternative near-term futures.
The inevitable winter
Is Europe heading toward an energy disaster when the weather turns? Samantha Gross on the likely paths of a major gas crisis.
Disruptions in democratic life
Now Holland
Why is support for the populist right surging in Europe? Matthias Matthijs on immigration, climate change, and a growing rural-urban divide.
The long game
Why is democracy struggling so much around the world? Francis Fukuyama on the recent history and unwritten future of the open society.
Same as the old boss
Why are elected authoritarians losing public support? Steven Levitsky on how voter frustration is turning against them.
Social change in the U.S.
‘The loneliest generation’
Why are American men and women moving in such different directions on public issues? Daniel Cox on how the attitudes and convictions of young adults are changing U.S. political life.
Movement and mirage
Is the U.S. Republican Party becoming a “multi-racial, working-class” coalition? Matt Grossmann assesses the evidence for a major political realignment.
Out of court
How are changes in U.S. abortion law reshaping American life? Mary Ziegler on the ambiguous political fallout of a seismic legal event.
China’s tectonic shifts
The deep end
What does population decline mean for China? Scott Rozelle on a globally invisible issue shaping the lives of millions of the country’s rural kids.
Under pressure
What’s wrong with China’s economy? Victor Shih on the causes, effects, and global reverberations of a big slowdown in the world’s biggest country.
Viral effects
What just happened with the mass street protests in China? Alec Ash on the causes and consequences of an unprecedented show of popular anger at the communist state.
Global competition and conflict
History begins again
How is the war in Ukraine changing Europe? Ivan Krastev on a new era for the old world.
Boundary issues
What’s the war doing to relations between Beijing and Moscow? Eyck Freymann on the challenges of navigating “a strategic mess for the Chinese.”
Restoration drama
Does the United States have a strategy for competing with China? G. John Ikenberry on repairing alliances, solving problems, and maneuvering for power.
We’ll be expanding our coverage, meanwhile—including on the challenges in developing humane technology, the changing stakes of health and well-being, and the emerging worlds of culture globally.
For access to full articles, our full archive—and to support The Signal as we build a new approach to current affairs—become a member.