Elisabeth Braw is a senior fellow with the Atlantic Council’s Transatlantic Security Initiative and a senior associate fellow at the European Leadership Network. She is a columnist with Foreign Policy and Politico Europe, where she writes on national security and the globalized economy, and is the author of God’s Spies and The Defender’s Dilemma.
“Braw weaves a kind of tapestry of stories that grounds this huge international phenomenon in lived experiences. It’s clever, and it helps to make sense of a story that can otherwise seem very distant and abstract.”—Jeremy Williams, Earthbound Report “Where [Goodbye Globalization] shines is that it is told through first-hand accounts of local MPs, business leaders, policymakers and politicians as well as local civic leaders and civil servants.”—Latika Bourne, Latika Takes “Compelling. . . . Understanding the history of the last globalisation is essential, and for that alone Braw’s book is a must-read.”—David Landsman, British Foreign Policy Group “Braw excels herself in this book. Sharply illustrated with real-life examples and vivid character sketches, closely argued and clearly written, she outlines the dangers unthinking globalisation created for our domestic cohesion and national security – and plots a path back from the brink.”—Edward Lucas, author of The New Cold War “Braw writes with long-established research authority and great personal wit, tracing the way so many optimistic expectations have been redefined; events and trends that leave us, indeed, with a new world to fashion as best we can. It’s the story of our era, and Elisabeth Braw tells it beautifully.”—Michael Clarke, author of The Challenge of Defending Britain “Braw has crafted a gem of a book, a trenchant, big-hearted account of the helter skelter history of globalisation, its slippery rise and apparent fall. Who shaped it, how did it lose its steam? Goodbye Globalization is peopled with hucksters and schemers but also philanthropists. . . . A fantastically eclectic cast of interview partners give insights into how it all went wrong.”—Roger Boyes, diplomatic editor of The Times “Braw has brilliantly explained the challenges we face now and in the coming years. We, the West, must get organized, strengthening our alliances while also strengthening our own national resilience in order to protect what has made us secure and prosperous. Elisabeth has shown us how.”—Lt Gen (ret.) Ben Hodges, former Commander General of United States Army Europe “The idea of mutual dependency between liberal democracies and authoritarian states brought money to some, but war and misery to many. Elisabeth Braw brilliantly analyses the causes behind the current global turmoil. Unfortunately more are set to come due to these misjudgements. Read this book and buckle up.”—Artis Pabriks, former deputy prime minister of Latvia