Bogotá
Intro
Located on the Sabana de Bogotá, the city concentrates national institutions and functions as Colombia’s primary interface with regional and global systems.
Background
Built on a pre-Columbian Muisca settlement, Bogotá became the Spanish colonial capital and later the seat of the Colombian republic. Centralization shaped its dominance over national political and economic life.
History
Muisca civilization
Spanish founding
Republican capital formation
Urban expansion amid internal conflict
Governance reform and metropolitan consolidation
Present Day
Bogotá hosts federal institutions, finance, and cultural industries. Urban governance focuses on mobility, security, inequality reduction, and air quality at megacity scale.
Future Outlook
Bogotá will remain Colombia’s central command node. Long-term resilience depends on transport integration, social inclusion, and managing rapid metropolitan growth.
Map
Articles
Why Iran Is Running Out of Water
Iran’s water crisis is driven by groundwater depletion, inefficient agriculture, and climate stress.
Iran’s Retaliation in Cold War Mode
How Tehran could turn confrontation in the Gulf into a strategic cost trap.
A European Covenant Draft for Peace in Ukraine
A complementary framework for long-term stability
The Hong Kong fire will change China’s Real Estate sector
China’s real estate sector is shaped by deeper pressures than market cycles alone.
Demographics, oversight consistency, due-diligence gaps and investment confidence now intersect in ways that define the sector’s next phase.
Pokrovsk: Logistics, Pressure and the Geometry of the Eastern Front
Pokrovsk has become the most stressed point on the eastern Ukrainian front.
China’s Fourth Plenum — Xi Tightens Control as Party Sets Course for the Next Five Years
Planning the future – the news between the lines.
Books To read for summer 2025
A summer reading list for those tracing the fractures of empire, freedom, and the European condition.
Event Timeline
Polish-Lithuanian Rule over Ukraine
Before Moscow, there was Lublin. The Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth laid the groundwork for Western Ukrainian identity — and for centuries of contested rule.