Friday, December 4, 2020

Center for Research on Geopolitics

SECTION FOR PROGNOSTICISM

CRG offers foresight research based on classical geopolitics and national power assessment. The purpose is to interpret the signal in the information noise of the 21st century.

An important project is to produce an Atlas of Classical Geopolitics starting with presenting a preview in 2020/2021. Drafts will follow on the subject of The Ongoing World Civil War and Hegemony as well as Cartography – Maps of Geopolitics.

The online center is based in Sweden and seeks to offer prognostic for the future. It seems today as there are two future perspectives that can be expected: change that opens the world to a new future similar to what took place in 1865 to 1900. The alternative is decline and catastrophe.

Mr. Bertil Haggman, LL.M. is author and director. He has served as prosecutor, assistant judge, enforcement service officer and senior enforcement service officer at various times for 30 years in Sweden. His first book was published in 1971 (co-authored) and he is represented in the catalogue of the Royal Library, Sweden’s national library, with almost sixty titles of which 15 are books. 

Haggman has travelled extensively in Asia on fact finding tours from 1967 to 2001.


Mr. Bertil Haggman, LL.M.

Author, director

Center for Research on Geopolitics (CRG) 


www.geopoliticsresearch.wordpress.com _________________________________________________________________


Center for Research on Geopolitics (CRG), SWEDEN. 

Director: Mr. Bertil Häggman, LL.M., author, director E-mail: bertilhaggman@hotmail.com






CALL FOR CONTRIBUTED BOOK REVIEWS FOR CCR


Through 2019 I as book review editor for the Comparative Civilizations Review would bring publishers’ review copies to the annual meetings and distribute them to attendees who volunteered to review them. 

The obstacles to in-person conferences presented by the pandemic, plus an increased reluctance of book publishers to provide review copies, make a change in the CCR book-reviewing process imperative.

I expect that we are all booklovers, perhaps all the more now, each with an idea of what books, new or old, are CCR-relevant and worth reviewing.  

Please tell me which books in your library or on your to-buy list you would like to review for CCR; or just send reviews!

If I get a deluge of reviews, or a drought, I may reach out to this list once again. I hope for a reasonable balance, but better a glut than a famine!  

Please email your reviews or proposals (as MS Word documents) to me at 

dow@ucla.edu

David Wilkinson
Book Review Editor
Comparative Civilizations Review