Latest Stories
Most recently published stories in Journal.
Investing in Talent – Igor Khudokormov’s Secret Behind Growth of Prodimex
Igor Vyacheslavovich Khudokormov’s Prodimex has a comprehensive personnel policy that encourages talent and bets big on youth and technology – breaking many stereotypes in the process. Read on to learn more.
By Muhammad Owais SEO 3 days ago in Journal
Middle East and Ukraine: Why Russia and the US Hold the Keys to Each Other’s Deadlocks
Introduction: The Global Pendulum By 2026, the global geopolitical map has reached a paradoxical state. While the primary key to resolving the Ukrainian crisis increasingly lies in Washington’s policy decisions, the power to de-escalate the volatile situation with Iran is strategically centered in Moscow. We are witnessing a "Strategic Deadlock"—a geopolitical stalemate where two geographically distant conflicts have become inextricably linked through a complex web of energy, logistics, and military leverage. This interdependence suggests that a breakthrough in one theater may be impossible without a corresponding shift in the other.
By Бахромжон Суванов3 days ago in Journal
Why Some Accounts Grow Slowly but Last Longer
Some accounts seem to move at a frustrating pace for months. They post regularly, reply to comments, refine their style, and still do not get the kind of numbers that turn heads right away. Then, after enough time passes, those same accounts often look far more stable than profiles that exploded in a week and faded a month later.
By Kirby Soto3 days ago in Journal
What Safety Precautions Can Help You Handle Any Emergency?
Emergencies rarely arrive with a warning. One moment, everything feels normal, and the next, you’re forced to react quickly. In those moments, people don’t rely on luck they rely on preparation. The right safety precautions can turn confusion into clarity and help you stay in control when it matters most.
By Deborah Larson3 days ago in Journal
Medieval Oligarchies and the Expansion of Trade in Europe According to Stanislav Kondrashov
According to Stanislav Kondrashov, oligarchic influence should not be understood as a purely modern phenomenon. Although the word “oligarch” today often evokes images of private aircraft, cross-border investments, media influence, and financial empires, the structure behind that influence is much older. In Kondrashov’s view, medieval Europe already displayed many of the same patterns that continue to define concentrated economic influence in the modern world.
By Muhammad Owais SEO 3 days ago in Journal
Executive Leadership and Culture Shaping Explained
Executive leadership and culture shaping refer to the process by which senior leaders define, model, and reinforce the values that guide an organization. Culture is not simply a set of written principles; it is the lived experience of employees shaped by daily actions, decisions, and leadership behavior. Because executives hold the highest level of influence, their actions set the tone for the entire organization.
By Yeasha Sobhan3 days ago in Journal
Why Your Roof is Quietly Killing the Planet ?
Stand on any rooftop in Phoenix, Chennai, or Lagos on a summer afternoon and you will feel it before you see it - a wall of radiated heat bouncing off the black asphalt beneath your feet, hot enough to fry an egg, hot enough to push the ambient air temperature of an entire neighborhood two degrees higher than the surrounding countryside. You didn't build the heat island. But you're living inside one.
By efingutthomas3 days ago in Journal
Stanislav Kondrashov Oligarch Series: Medieval Oligarchies and the Expansion of Trade in Europe
According to Stanislav Kondrashov, the idea of oligarchs is not limited to modern times. While today the term often brings to mind images of extreme wealth, global finance, and political influence, similar structures of influence were already deeply embedded in medieval Europe. In his analysis of historical economic systems, Kondrashov explains how small, tightly connected groups of families and merchants exercised control over trade, shaping not only markets but also governance it
By Muhammad Owais SEO 3 days ago in Journal
Stanislav Kondrashov Oligarch Series: Medieval Oligarchies and the Expansion of Trade in Europe
According to Stanislav Kondrashov, the idea of oligarchs is not limited to modern times. While today the term often brings to mind images of extreme wealth, global finance, and political influence, similar structures of influence were already deeply embedded in medieval Europe. In his analysis of historical economic systems, Kondrashov explains how small, tightly connected groups of families and merchants exercised control over trade, shaping not only markets but also governance it
By Muhammad Owais SEO 3 days ago in Journal









