The Global
Risks Report 2016 features perspectives from nearly 750 experts on the
perceived impact and likelihood of 29 prevalent global risks over a 10-year
timeframe. The risks are divided into five categories: economic, environmental,
geopolitical, societal and technological. The report also examines the
interconnections among the risks, and “(dis)empowered citizen”, the impact of
climate change on food security, and the potential of pandemics to threaten
social cohesion.
The report
also takes an in-depth look at the how the global security landscape could
evolve in the future; sharing the outcomes of a year-long study to examine
current trends and possible driving forces for the future of international
security.
To read click here: The Global Risk Report 2016