Discover what’s really shaping the Ukraine War – from the economy to the battlefield to the future of Ukrainian politics.
How to register?
Fill out the registration form on this page
Check your email — you’ll get an email with your personal access link to your personal dashboard wit lecture.
What You’ll Learn?
First lecture: Military Keynesianism and the Success-Driven Dizziness Speaker: Dr. Vladislav Inozemtsev
A deep dive into the transformation of Russia’s wartime economy:
How “deathonomics” turned war spending into economic stimulus
The rise of shadow trade networks and legal grey zones
Why wage growth, not just budgets, fuels Russia’s economic recovery
The risks of economic overheating: inflation, labour shortages, and strategic overconfidence
“The Kremlin may be confident in its war economy – but at what cost?”
Dr. Vladislav Inozemtsev “The Kremlin may be confident in its war economy – but at what cost?”
Dr. Anatol Lieven “Just like in the world wars, this conflict has rewritten military assumptions.”
Dr. Mikhail Minakov “The end of the war won’t bring back the old politics – it will create a new one.”
What the battlefield really taught us:
The return of defensive supremacy in modern war
Why the tank is no longer king
The underestimated role of troop numbers
And a naval lesson that may deeply unsettle the US military establishment
Second lecture: Military Lessons of the Ukraine War Speaker: Dr. Anatol Lieven
Party System and Power Networks in Ukraine During and After the War Speaker: Dr. Mikhail Minakov
How the Ukrainian party system collapsed into informal networks
Which elites and military figures could dominate the next political cycle
What kind of political landscape will emerge after the war
Why patronage, not ideology, is shaping Ukraine’s political future
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1. Analysts – From think tanks, governments, and media, focused on geopolitical and economic trends. 2. Diplomats & Civil Servants – Involved in foreign policy, security, and international cooperation. 3. Business & Investors – Operating in high-risk regions, needing strategic risk assessment tools. 4. Journalists – Covering global affairs, seeking expert analysis and networks. 5. Academics & Students – Engaged in political science or economics with practical interests. 6. Consultants & Risk Experts – Advising on strategy, crisis, and political risk.