The World Today (magazine)

http://dbpedia.org/resource/The_World_Today_(magazine) an entity of type: Thing

The World Today is a monthly global affairs magazine founded by Chatham House in 1945. It was formerly published six times a year and aims to bring the Institute's analysis to a broad audience. It replaced the Bulletin of International News, which was published from 1925 to 1945. Following its re-design in February 2012, the magazine has moved from a monthly to a bi-monthly format and been extended to 52 pages. Prominent contributors have included Niall Ferguson, Jon Snow, Carl Bildt, and Colombian President Manuel Santos. rdf:langString
rdf:langString The World Today (magazine)
rdf:langString The World Today
xsd:integer 23887613
xsd:integer 1086721480
rdf:langString London
rdf:langString global affairs
rdf:langString United Kingdom
xsd:integer 1945
rdf:langString Bimonthly
rdf:langString Cover of the February/March 2012 issue
rdf:langString The World Today cover February-March 2012.jpg
xsd:integer 43
rdf:langString English
rdf:langString The World Today
rdf:langString The World Today is a monthly global affairs magazine founded by Chatham House in 1945. It was formerly published six times a year and aims to bring the Institute's analysis to a broad audience. It replaced the Bulletin of International News, which was published from 1925 to 1945. Following its re-design in February 2012, the magazine has moved from a monthly to a bi-monthly format and been extended to 52 pages. Prominent contributors have included Niall Ferguson, Jon Snow, Carl Bildt, and Colombian President Manuel Santos. As well as covering major issues in international relations, the magazine contains book, film and museum reviews from around the world. The magazine is sent to decision-makers in nine of the 10 largest FTSE 100 companies by market capitalization and major embassies in London, as well as to key individuals in the British Parliament, Whitehall, the media, and the academic world.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 4347
rdf:langString Cover of the February/March 2012 issue
xsd:string 0043-9134

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