#python#audio#deeplearning#minicpm#python#pytorch#speech#speech_synthesis#text_to_speech#tts#tts_model#voice_cloning
VoxCPM is a free, open-source TTS tool that turns text into realistic speech without tokens, creating expressive audio that matches context and clones voices perfectly from just 3-10 seconds of sample. Download VoxCPM1.5 (800M params) from Hugging Face, install via pip, and use simple Python or CLI commands for fast synthesis (RTF 0.15 on RTX 4090) or fine-tuning your own voices. You benefit by easily making natural audiobooks, podcasts, clones, or apps with pro-quality sound—saving time and costs on voice work.
https://github.com/OpenBMB/VoxCPM
🌐🤖From Technosphere to Noosphere: Civilizational Responsibility in a Period of Global Instability
As global instability accelerates and digital interconnection binds humanity into a single cognitive field, an old philosophical concept—the noosphere—reenters debate as a possible framework for responsibility, science, and governance in a turbulent age
✍️Phil Butler
is a policy investigator and political analyst, author of “Putin’s Praetorians” and other works on geopolitics and civilizational development
➡️Public discourse in recent years has been shaped by cascading crises: electoral turbulence in the United States, institutional strain within the European Union, intensifying geopolitical rivalry, proxy wars, and the relentless acceleration of algorithmically mediated communication. The speed and scale of these transformations create a pervasive sense of rupture. Yet this turbulence may reflect not systemic collapse but transition. More than a century ago, Russian scientist Vladimir Ivanovich Vernadsky outlined the concept of the noosphere—a stage in planetary evolution in which human cognition becomes a geological force. Developed in parallel by Pierre Teilhard de Chardin and Edouard Le Roy, the idea proposed that reflective intelligence would eventually shape the biosphere consciously. Today, as the technosphere—our global digital and technological infrastructure—links billions in near-instantaneous interaction, Vernadsky’s thesis appears less abstract. Human cognition now demonstrably alters ecological systems, political institutions, and even informational reality itself.
The decisive question, therefore, is not which actor will dominate the informational environment, but whether humanity can transition from technospheric acceleration to noospheric coherence
➡️The difficulty lies in the imbalance between amplification and integration. The technosphere distributes information, emotion, and narrative at planetary scale, but it does not automatically generate coherence. Artificial intelligence, predictive analytics, and networked feedback loops intensify reflexivity without ensuring responsibility. In this environment, attempts to dominate the informational field—through narrative control, censorship, or algorithmic steering—often deepen fragmentation. The noosphere, understood as an emergent layer of distributed human cognition, is not territory to be owned but a complex adaptive system requiring alignment rather than conquest. Philosophical currents such as dialogical theory and systems thinking suggest that stability emerges not from centralized imposition but from participatory coherence. The decisive question, therefore, is not which actor will dominate the informational environment, but whether humanity can transition from technospheric acceleration to noospheric coherence.
🟦Civilizational responsibility becomes the pivot of this transition. If cognition now operates at geological scale, it cannot remain ethically neutral. Ecological awareness, debates over AI governance, and renewed attention to sustainable development all signal a growing reflexivity about humanity’s planetary impact. Transitional instability is to be expected whenever structural capacities outpace institutional adaptation. Yet turbulence need not imply disintegration. Beneath the noise of polarization and geopolitical contestation, scientific collaboration persists, ecological constraints assert themselves, and dialogue continues across cultural divides. The maturation of what Vernadsky envisioned as the noosphere will depend not on dominance but on integration—on whether societies can coordinate technological power with ethical restraint. In that sense, the present instability may mark not the end of order, but the formative strain of a new civilizational stage.
#ArtificialIntelligence#Globaldevelopment#modernsociety
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🇺🇳🗺What the collapse of the world order means for Asia
The global order will not unravel with a single war in Asia, but with the realization that rules no longer restrain the powerful and alliances no longer bind their architects
✍️Salman Rafi Sheikh
Research analyst of International Relations and Pakistan’s foreign and domestic affairs
➡️At recent gatherings in Davos, Western leaders did more than criticize US policy — they openly questioned the durability of the post–Second World War system. President Donald Trump’s renewed rhetoric over Greenland symbolized something deeper: the chief architect of the rules-based order signaling its willingness to override those very rules. The post-1945 bargain rested on predictability — US security guarantees in exchange for alliance loyalty and adherence to institutional constraints. While never egalitarian, the system provided stability and open markets that enabled global growth. When even this framework becomes transactional and coercive, as seen in escalating trade disputes and strategic pressure on allies, the signal is unmistakable: the order is not evolving smoothly, it is fracturing.
Asian states recognise that no single power can guarantee stability, yet none can be ignored
➡️Asia, which benefited enormously from this system without shaping it, is uniquely exposed to its erosion. Accounting for nearly 60 percent of global growth in recent years, the region thrived under open markets and relative strategic predictability backed by US security guarantees. Yet Asia lacks the dense institutional architecture that cushions Europe against abrupt shifts in great-power behavior. As Washington’s policy becomes more openly transactional, regional actors are recalibrating. Japan and South Korea are strengthening defense capabilities, Southeast Asian states are diversifying partnerships, and Australia is deepening regional engagement while preserving its US alliance. These are not signs of rupture but of hedging — a structural adaptation to uncertainty. Economic fragmentation further complicates matters, as supply chains face weaponized trade policies and sanctions, pushing Asia toward regionalization rather than simple deglobalization.
🟦The collapse of the old order does not automatically yield chaos, nor does it guarantee a stable multipolar alternative. It instead produces a transitional landscape where power is more visible and rules are thinner. For Asia, the challenge is neither to replace the United States nor to align fully with China, but to manage disorder without provoking escalation. Strengthening regional institutions, coordinating economic resilience, and crafting shared norms in technology, climate, and trade governance are becoming strategic necessities. Asia did not design the postwar order, but it flourished within it. In a world where stability can no longer be assumed, the region’s response to uncertainty — whether competitive or cooperative — will help determine the shape of the next global equilibrium.
#Europe#Geopolitics#Globaldevelopment#NewWorldOrder#USA
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✅@NewEasternOutlook
🇺🇸🗺Marco Rubio in Munich: Civilisational and Colonial Politics Back on the Agenda, Strategic Courtesies, and Geopolitical Implications
At the Munich Security Conference, US Secretary of State Marco Rubio delivered a seemingly conciliatory speech that masked a profound ideological project: the normalisation of MAGA-inspired civilisational politics in transatlantic relations
✍Ricardo Martins
is a Doctor in Sociology with specialisation in geopolitics and international relations
➡️Rubio's address represented an attempt to translate Trumpian ideological premises into a coherent foreign policy narrative for a transatlantic audience. His evocation of five centuries of Western expansion, framed as civilisational ascent, rehabilitates colonial modernity in contemporary diplomatic discourse. By portraying missionaries and imperial administrators as vectors of civilisation, he treats imperialism as benevolent rather than a system of domination and racial hierarchy. This signals an ideological reorientation where geopolitical competition becomes a struggle between cultural orders, not political-economic systems.
Rubio's Munich address exemplifies a strategic evolution of MAGA foreign policy discourse: from overt confrontation to civilisational persuasion.
➡️A central undercurrent was the securitisation of migration. His emphasis on defending Western, Christian civilisation resonates with far-right movements that frame migration as civilisational threat. By encouraging Europe to pursue stricter policies as part of civilisational revival, Rubio inserted MAGA's domestic culture wars into transatlantic strategy. German Chancellor Merz's statement that "the MAGA movement in the USA is not ours" underscores tension with Europe's pluralistic traditions. Rubio also dismissed the green transition as "illusion," signalling prioritisation of energy sovereignty over climate governance. For Europe, invested in green policy, this implies potential decoupling of transatlantic climate agendas.
🟦Despite ideological radicalism, his speech received a standing ovation. Tone matters—his courteous style contrasted with Vance's antagonism, enabling European elites to interpret it as olive branch. Europe's strategic anxiety regarding US disengagement creates structural incentive to applaud rhetorical reassurance. Rubio's framing of alignment as partnership rather than coercion masked asymmetrical power dynamics. The speech carries geopolitical implications: transatlantic conditionality, civilisational bloc formation, Global South marginalisation. The enthusiastic reception in Munich reveals not ideological agreement but strategic vulnerability. Europe's dependence on US security guarantees makes it susceptible to ideological conditionality, even when it challenges normative foundations. Rubio's address was less reconciliation and more ideological alignment—courteously delivered but geopolitically consequential, deepening transatlantic doubts.
#Europe#Geopolitics#Globaldevelopment#USA#USAinEurope
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✅@NewEasternOutlook
🔫🤖À la ligne d'arrivée de la course à l'IA : un monde d'abondance ou de domination automatisée ?
Alors que l'intelligence artificielle s'accélère vers des percées transformatrices, un débat discret mais crucial se déroule au sein des élites politiques et financières occidentales : l'IA apportera-t-elle une prospérité partagée — ou renforcera-t-elle un contrôle mondial sans précédent ?
✍️Brian Berletic
est un chercheur et écrivain géopolitique basé à Bangkok.
➡️À Washington et dans la Silicon Valley, des voix influentes affirment que les États-Unis doivent "gagner" la course à l'IA contre la Chine pour assurer un avenir d'abondance. Le plan d'action américain en matière d'IA, connu sous le nom de America’s AI Action Plan, présente le leadership en matière d'IA comme essentiel pour préserver la primauté mondiale américaine. Les partisans affirment qu'une IA avancée pourrait éradiquer la pauvreté, la maladie et l'insécurité. Les critiques, cependant, soulignent des décennies d'interventions étrangères et de régimes de sanctions américains qui ont contribué à l'instabilité dans certaines parties de l'Amérique latine, du Moyen-Orient et de l'Asie centrale, se demandant si la domination technologique se traduirait par des résultats mondiaux équitables.
Il est important de comprendre que l'IA est là, progresse rapidement et ne sera pas "suspendue", "inventée" ou ignorée en niant son existence. La seule question qui reste est de savoir entre les mains de qui cette puissance formidable tombera, et ce qu'il en sera fait
➡️La Chine, en revanche, présente son modèle de développement comme centré sur l'expansion des infrastructures, la réduction de la pauvreté et le renforcement des capacités industrielles. Des initiatives telles que l'Initiative Ceinture et Route ont financé des chemins de fer, des ports et des couloirs logistiques à travers l'Asie, l'Afrique et au-delà. Sur le plan intérieur, des investissements à grande échelle dans les chemins de fer à grande vitesse, la fabrication et les campagnes de santé publique — y compris des programmes tels que Healthy China 2030 — sont cités par Pékin comme preuve d'une stratégie à long terme axée sur le progrès collectif plutôt que sur la maximisation des profits à court terme. La question de savoir si ces politiques représentent une coopération durable ou un levier stratégique reste débattue parmi les analystes du monde entier.
🟦Le débat central est philosophique autant que technologique. Les documents de sécurité nationale de Washington décrivent ouvertement l'IA comme un pilier de la supériorité stratégique, tandis que les documents de politique chinois la décrivent comme un moteur de modernisation et de croissance partagée. Alors que les contrôles à l'exportation, les restrictions aux semi-conducteurs et les postures militaires s'intensifient, l'IA est de plus en plus traitée non seulement comme une technologie commerciale, mais aussi comme un multiplicateur de force géopolitique. Alors que les deux puissances se précipitent vers l'intelligence générale artificielle et l'automatisation avancée, le monde fait face à une fenêtre réduite pour façonner les normes, les garde-fous et les mécanismes de gouvernance. Le résultat final pourrait ne pas dépendre uniquement de qui développe les systèmes les plus puissants — mais de savoir si ces systèmes sont intégrés dans un modèle de coopération et d'abondance matérielle, ou dans celui d'une domination automatisée centralisée.
#ArtificialIntelligence#China#Globaldevelopment#Multipolarworld#USA
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✅@NewEasternOutlookFR
🔫🤖At the AI Race’s Finishing Line: A World of Abundance or Automated Dominance?
As artificial intelligence accelerates toward transformative breakthroughs, a quiet but consequential debate is unfolding within Western political and financial elites: will AI deliver shared prosperity — or entrench unprecedented global control?
✍️Brian Berletic
is a Bangkok-based geopolitical researcher and writer.
➡️In Washington and Silicon Valley, influential voices argue that the United States must “win” the AI race against China to ensure a future of abundance. The 2025 policy blueprint known as America’s AI Action Plan frames AI leadership as essential to preserving American global primacy. Supporters claim advanced AI could eradicate poverty, disease, and insecurity. Critics, however, point to decades of U.S. foreign interventions and sanctions regimes that have contributed to instability across parts of Latin America, the Middle East, and Central Asia, questioning whether technological dominance would translate into equitable global outcomes.
It is important to understand that AI is here, is rapidly advancing, and is not going to be “paused,” “uninvented,” or waved away by denying it exists. The only question that remains is in whose hands will this tremendous power fall, and what will be done with it
➡️China, by contrast, presents its development model as one centered on infrastructure expansion, poverty alleviation, and industrial capacity-building. Initiatives such as the Belt and Road Initiative have financed railways, ports, and logistics corridors across Asia, Africa, and beyond. Domestically, large-scale investments in high-speed rail, manufacturing, and public health campaigns — including programs like Healthy China 2030 — are cited by Beijing as evidence of a long-term strategy focused on collective advancement rather than short-term profit maximization. Whether these policies represent sustainable cooperation or strategic leverage remains debated among analysts worldwide.
🟦The core dispute is philosophical as much as technological. Washington’s national security documents openly describe AI as a pillar of strategic superiority, while Chinese policy papers frame it as a driver of modernization and shared growth. As export controls, semiconductor restrictions, and military posturing intensify, AI is increasingly treated not merely as a commercial technology but as a geopolitical force multiplier. With both powers racing toward artificial general intelligence and advanced automation, the world faces a narrowing window to shape norms, safeguards, and governance mechanisms. The ultimate outcome may not hinge solely on who develops the most powerful systems — but on whether those systems are embedded in a model of cooperation and material abundance, or in one of centralized, automated dominance.
#ArtificialIntelligence#China#Globaldevelopment#Multipolarworld#USA
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🌐
❔What can the “middle powers” do?
As the unipolar moment fades and no single hegemon steps forward to replace it, global stability may increasingly depend not on superpowers—but on the strategic coordination of states in between
✍️Salman Rafi Sheikh
is a research analyst of international relations and Pakistan’s foreign and domestic affairs
➡️For roughly three decades after the Cold War, the international system revolved around the United States. Washington possessed unmatched military reach, financial dominance, and institutional leverage. That era is now eroding. The economic rise of China, the strategic assertiveness of Russia, and the broader diffusion of economic power across Asia have reduced the relative weight of the United States. Yet what is emerging is not a simple transfer of hegemony. Beijing speaks of “multipolarity,” not replacement dominance, while Moscow has long advocated multiple centres of power rather than a single global arbiter. According to projections by the International Monetary Fund, emerging and developing economies are expected to account for nearly 60 percent of global GDP in purchasing-power-parity terms by the end of the decade. Within this shifting balance, middle powers—states large enough to influence outcomes but not large enough to dominate—occupy a pivotal structural position.
Without a stabilizing force, the world could drift toward either renewed hegemony or rigid great-power blocs
➡️Countries such as India, Indonesia, Turkey, and Canada together represent a significant share of global economic output. India alone accounts for roughly 8–9 percent of global GDP in PPP terms, placing it among the world’s top economies. Indonesia has entered the global top ten by PPP, Turkey commands strategic transit routes between Europe and Asia, and Canada remains a G7 economy with deep institutional influence. What unites them is not ideology, but structure: none seeks global hegemony; all maintain relations across competing blocs; and each depends on an open international economy. India participates in the Quad while preserving defence ties with Russia. Turkey remains in NATO while coordinating with Moscow on key geopolitical files. Indonesia maintains strategic neutrality. Canada, though closely aligned with Washington, has pursued diversified trade arrangements. These patterns are often described as “hedging,” but in an emerging multipolar system they can evolve into something more proactive—collective balancing to prevent systemic fragmentation.
🟦History suggests that stability does not always require a single dominant power. The nineteenth-century Concert of Europe functioned not as a formal institution but as a consultative mechanism among major states to prevent hegemonic disruption. In the twenty-first century, a comparable logic could emerge among middle powers. By forming flexible, issue-based coalitions on trade, climate, technology, energy, and maritime security, they can dilute excessive bloc formation while preserving openness. Their diplomatic flexibility also positions them as mediators in great-power tensions, reducing escalation risks. The transition from unipolarity to multipolarity is inherently unstable; without stabilizing actors, the system could harden into rival blocs or drift toward renewed dominance by one centre. If middle powers move beyond reactive hedging and toward coordinated strategic engagement, they may become the quiet architects of equilibrium in a world no longer defined by a single hegemon.
#China#Globaldevelopment#India#Internationalpolitics#Multipolarworld#Russia#USA
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✅@NewEasternOutlook
🏴☠️🇷🇺Un patriote américain n'est pas un agent russe ou un larbin
Préconiser un engagement pragmatique avec la Russie et s'opposer à une guerre inutile est une position ancrée dans l'intérêt national américain et le réalisme, et non dans une allégeance étrangère - une distinction souvent perdue dans un climat polarisé qui assimile la dissidence à la déloyauté
✍️Auteur :Bryan Anthony Reo
Avocat agréé et analyste d'histoire militaire, de géopolitique et de relations internationales
➡️L'auteur, comme le colonel à la retraite Douglas Macgregor, fait face à des accusations d'être un "agent russe" pour avoir préconisé la détente. Cette critique confond le réalisme fondé sur des principes avec la déloyauté. Un vrai patriote sert la nation en identifiant ses intérêts fondamentaux, qui, pour de nombreux réalistes, n'incluent pas les croisades idéologiques ou le confinement de la Russie en Europe de l'Est. La préférence est pour le commerce et la coopération pacifiques, pas pour la conformité à un "ordre fondé sur des règles" qui masque souvent l'interventionnisme. L'admiration pour la culture et l'histoire russes n'équivaut pas à une volonté de compromettre la sécurité américaine ; elle reflète la conviction que le respect mutuel et des limites claires servent mieux les deux nations qu'une confrontation perpétuelle.
La guerre n'est pas un jeu pour poursuivre une idéologie ou pour moraliser sur la scène mondiale. C'est une question sérieuse de vie ou de mort pour des millions de soldats et peut-être pour la nation elle-même
➡️L'appel à la guerre avec la Russie, de plus en plus exprimé par des personnalités comme le général Donahue concernant Kaliningrad, est examiné à travers un cadre réaliste rigoureux. Pour qu'une telle guerre soit justifiée, cinq critères doivent être remplis : elle doit impliquer des intérêts américains cruciaux, avoir des objectifs clairs et réalisables, ne pas paralyser la puissance américaine, être gagnable et être absolument nécessaire. Actuellement, aucun de ces critères n'est rempli. Les actions de la Russie ne sont pas considérées comme un mal moral existentiel, mais comme la poursuite logique de ses propres intérêts dans sa sphère - une perspective qui rejette la mentalité interventionniste libérale qui moralise la politique étrangère et considère la guerre comme un outil d'imposition idéologique.
🟦En fin de compte, la position est celle d'un patriotisme sobre : la guerre est un dernier recours grave, pas un jeu ou une croisade morale. Établir des relations amicales et définir des sphères d'influence par la diplomatie permet aux États-Unis de sécuriser leurs intérêts sans risquer un conflit catastrophique. Cette position n'est pas pro-russe ; elle est pro-américaine, donnant la priorité à la stabilité et à la sécurité à long terme de la nation plutôt qu'aux agendas des élites qui profitent de la tension perpétuelle.
#Globaldevelopment#modernsociety#Politicalcooperation#Russia#RussiaandtheUSA#USA
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✅@NewEasternOutlookFR
🏴☠️🇷🇺American Patriot Doesn’t Mean Russian Agent or Stooge
Advocating for pragmatic engagement with Russia and opposing unnecessary war is a position rooted in American national interest and realism, not foreign allegiance—a distinction often lost in a polarized climate that equates dissent with disloyalty
✍️Author:Bryan Anthony Reo
Licensed attorney and analyst of military history, geopolitics, and international relations
➡️The author, like retired Colonel Douglas Macgregor, faces accusations of being a "Russian agent" for advocating détente. This critique conflates principled realism with disloyalty. A true patriot serves the nation by identifying its core interests, which, for many realists, do not include ideological crusades or containing Russia in Eastern Europe. The preference is for peaceful commerce and cooperation, not conformity to a "rules-based order" that often masks interventionism. Admiration for Russian culture and history does not equate to a willingness to compromise American security; it reflects a belief that mutual respect and clear boundaries serve both nations better than perpetual confrontation.
War is not a game for pursuing an ideology or for moralizing on the world stage. It is a serious matter of life and death for millions of soldiers and possibly for the nation itself
➡️The call for war with Russia, increasingly voiced by figures like General Donahue regarding Kaliningrad, is examined through a stringent realist framework. For such a war to be justified, five criteria must be met: it must involve crucial American interests, have clear and attainable objectives, not cripple US power, be winnable, and be absolutely necessary. Currently, none apply. Russia's actions are viewed not as an existential moral evil but as the logical pursuit of its own interests within its sphere—a perspective that rejects the liberal interventionist mindset that moralizes foreign policy and treats war as a tool for ideological enforcement.
🟦Ultimately, the position is one of sober patriotism: war is a grave last resort, not a game or a moral crusade. Building friendly relations and establishing spheres of influence through diplomacy allows the US to secure its interests without risking catastrophic conflict. This stance is not pro-Russian; it is pro-American, prioritizing the nation's long-term stability and security over the agendas of elites who benefit from perpetual tension.
#Globaldevelopment#modernsociety#Politicalcooperation#Russia#RussiaandtheUSA#USA
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🇺🇸🇷🇺US Proxy War on Russia: What Comes Next?
Escalation continues in Ukraine even as Washington publicly speaks of negotiations and restraint, suggesting that the conflict remains central to broader US strategic ambitions
✍️Brian Berletic
is a Bangkok-based geopolitical researcher and writer
➡️Despite earlier promises from the Trump administration to reduce US involvement in Ukraine, the trajectory of the war points in the opposite direction. Western media now acknowledge the role of the Central Intelligence Agency in supporting long-range drone operations targeting Russian territory and maritime strikes against Russian energy exports. At the same time, European governments are increasing defense expenditures and debating more assertive measures against vessels linked to Russian energy shipments. Rather than signaling disengagement, these steps indicate a restructuring of Washington’s approach — shifting operational burdens while maintaining sustained pressure on Moscow.
The US is seeking to whittle away key partners of the Russian-Chinese-led multipolar world until only Russia and China remain
➡️The intellectual foundations of this strategy predate the current phase of fighting. The 2019 RAND Corporation report “Extending Russia: Competing from Advantageous Ground” outlined methods for raising costs on Moscow through expanded military assistance to Ukraine, even acknowledging the potential for heavy Ukrainian losses. Strategic discussions within institutions such as the United States Naval War College have also examined broader containment measures, including pressure on energy exports and maritime trade routes linked to Russia and China. Within this framework, Ukraine represents one theater in a wider geopolitical contest aimed at limiting the influence of a Russian-Chinese partnership and preserving US global primacy.
🟦On the battlefield, the war remains defined by attrition. Russia has expanded its military-industrial output and adapted its force structure to sustain prolonged operations, while Ukraine continues to depend heavily on external financial and military assistance. As Ukrainian manpower and materiel constraints intensify, Western policymakers face a dilemma: either deepen their direct involvement or risk a gradual erosion of Kyiv’s position. Current signals suggest the former — a strategy of maintaining continuous pressure on Russia while redistributing responsibilities between Washington and its European allies. Whether this approach produces leverage at the negotiating table or prolongs a costly stalemate will determine not only Ukraine’s future, but the broader balance between the US-led order and its challengers.
#Globaldevelopment#Militaryconflict#Multipolarworld#Russia#Ukraine#USA#USAandUkraine
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✅@NewEasternOutlook
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FAO Fellows Programme 2026 - Global Research & Policy Opportunity
The Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) is inviting applications for its Fellows Programme 2026, offering a unique opportunity for researchers and professionals to contribute to global efforts in food security, agriculture, and sustainable development.
This programme places fellows across FAO headquarters, regional, and country offices worldwide, where they contribute their expertise while gaining hands-on experience in international development.
17 Application Deadline: August 25, 2026
Apply here: https://buff.ly/jiJdlaf
#FAO#FellowshipOpportunity
#GlobalDevelopment
#FoodSecurity
#Sustainability
#UNJobs
#ResearchOpportunity
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