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Dec 15, 2014

Addressing the food, water, and energy nexus: transatlantic perspectives and Africa’s great chance

By Peter Engelke

Addressing the Food, Water, and Energy Nexus: Transatlantic Perspectives and Africa’s Great Chance, a joint collaboration between the Atlantic Council’s Africa Center and the Strategic Foresight Initiative of the Brent Scowcroft Center on International Security, examines how Africa can best leverage its food, water, and energy resources for sustainable development.

Africa Energy & Environment

Issue Brief

Oct 3, 2014

Diplomacy for a diffuse world

By Roxanne Cabral, Peter Engelke, Katherine Brown, and Anne Terman Wedner

“Diplomacy for a Diffuse World,” the latest from the Atlantic Council’s Strategic Foresight Initiative, in partnership with the US Advisory Commission on Public Diplomacy, examines how key global trends—the diffusion of power and the rise of individual empowerment—significantly impact the way the United States government must conduct diplomacy.

Civil Society Politics & Diplomacy

FutureSource

Apr 10, 2014

The US and the World Gather in Medellin

By Peter Engelke

This week, Medellin, Colombia is hosting the World Urban Forum, the 7th iteration of the United Nation’s biannual conference series dedicated to the world’s cities. Some 25,000 people from everywhere on Earth are gathering at “WUF7” to discuss the governance challenges, and the unlimited opportunities, that are found in the world’s cities. The scale and […]

Peter Engelke is a senior fellow with the Atlantic Council’s Scowcroft Center for Strategy and Security and the Global Energy Center, and he is also an executive fellow at the World Economic Forum.

At the Atlantic Council, Engelke is the creator of the Council’s most widely read long-form publication series, Global Foresight. His diverse work portfolio spans strategic foresight; geopolitics, diplomacy, and international relations; climate change and Earth systems; food, water, and energy security; emerging and disruptive technologies and tech-based innovation ecosystems; and demographics and urbanization, among other subjects. Engelke’s work has appeared or featured in The Washington PostLos Angeles TimesFinancial TimesNBC NewsCBS News, The Hill, The National Interest, Citiscope, Meeting of the MindsInkstick, the World Economic Forum, and other outlets.

Previously, Engelke was on the adjunct faculty at Georgetown University’s School of Continuing Studies, where he received the Tropaia Outstanding Faculty Award; a member of the World Economic Forum’s Global Future Council on Complex Risks; an executive-in-residence at the Geneva Centre for Security Policy; a Bosch fellow with the Robert Bosch Foundation in Stuttgart, Germany; and a visiting fellow at the Stimson Center in Washington. He was also a frequent lecturer at the US Department of State’s Foreign Service Institute.

Engelke received his PhD in history from Georgetown University and master’s degrees from Georgetown’s Walsh School of Foreign Service (German and European studies), the University of Maryland (public policy), and Indiana University (political science). Engelke has co-authored two books: The Great Acceleration, a history of the world since 1945, and Health and Community Design, a study of public health and urban form.