The Naked Diplomat: Understanding Power and Politics in the Digital Age
By (Author) Tom Fletcher
HarperCollins Publishers
William Collins
6th April 2017
23rd March 2017
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Digital and information technologies: social and ethical aspects
Impact of science and technology on society
Media studies: internet, digital media and society
Political control and freedoms
Diplomacy
Globalization
Political leaders and leadership
Political science and theory
327.2
Paperback
336
Width 129mm, Height 198mm, Spine 21mm
240g
Previously published as Naked Diplomacy.
Who will be in power in the 21st century Governments Big business Internet titans And how do we influence the future
Digital technology is changing power at a faster rate than any time in history. Distrust is fuelling political uncertainty; inequality is fuelling economic uncertainty; and massive technological change is fuelling existential uncertainty. The scaffolding built around the 20th century global order is fragile, and the checks and balances created over centuries to protect liberty are being tested, maybe to destruction. Tom Fletcher, the youngest senior British ambassador for 200 years, considers how we - as governments, businesses, individuals - can survive and thrive in the 21st century. And how we can ensure that technology helps us create opportunity, improve security, outsmart the extremists, and mak it easier for citizens to truly take back control.
A riveting personal insight into the reality of international relations
Charlie Burton, GQ
Articulate, intelligent and immensely readable Fletcher is an irrepressible optimist and his enthusiasm is contagious. Britain is fortunate to have diplomats with his skills and drive
Emma Sky, New Statesman
Welcome to Britains new brand of diplomacy
Evening Standard
On Her Majestys Service, in a new way. Britains mould-breaking ambassador was appointed at only 36 at the height of the Arab Uprisings. Fletchers Naked Diplomacy was a new brand of 21st-century statecraft: flexible transparent, engaged with the public as much as with politicians
BBC World Service
"A call for us all to reconsider our place in society and in our interconnected world. It urges us to be brave, creative, involved and connected. Diplomacy, he insists, is too important to be left to diplomats and he calls on us citizen diplomats to engage with it, to wield power As the pages turned, I thought this read increasingly as a new manifesto, and I finished it thinking how unsurprised I would be if Fletcher ended up running the Foreign Office, or the country
Anthony Sattin, Observer
Brilliant, funny polemic a cracking read
Roger Boyes
The Times (11 June 2016)
A brilliant book
Stig Abell, LBC and Editor of the Times Literary Supplement
A diplomatic genius
Gordon Brown
Tom Fletcher CMG is a Visiting Professor of International Relations at New York University, and Visiting Professor of Diplomatic Practice at the Emirates Diplomatic Academy. He was British Ambassador to Lebanon ( 2011-15), and the Downing Street foreign policy adviser to three Prime Ministers, (2007-11). He is an Honorary Fellow of Oxford University, and the Global Strategy Director for the Global Business Coalition for Education, which seeks to harness private sector efforts to get 59 million children into school. He blogs as the Naked Diplomat, and chairs the International Advisory Council of the Creative Industries Federation, promoting Britain's most dynamic and magnetic sector overseas. Tom is leading a review of British diplomacy for the UK Foreign Office, and a report on the future of the United Nations for the next UN Secretary General. Tom is married to Dr Louise Fletcher, a psychotherapist, and they have two sons.