Click here for the Friday Reading Search, a searchable archive of reading and knowledge resources

Since March 2020, Airmic has been issuing Friday Reading, a curated series of readings and knowledge resources sent by email to Airmic members. The objective of Airmic Friday Reading was initially to keep members informed during the Covid-19 pandemic. Today, Airmic Friday Reading has evolved in scope to include content on a wide range of subjects with each email edition following a theme. This page is a searchable archive of all the readings and knowledge resources that have been shared.

To select multiple categories and/or keywords, use Ctrl+Click (or +Click on a Mac).
World Economic Forum (with Marsh and Zurich), 15th January 2025
Friday Reading Edition 232 (17th January 2025)
As we enter 2025, the global outlook is increasingly fractured across geopolitical, environmental, societal, economic and technological domains. State-based armed conflict is the top risk for 2025.
KPMG, 1st January 2025
Friday Reading Edition 232 (17th January 2025)
As the UK looks ahead to more growth in 2025, the year could bring renewed challenges from a higher pace of inflation, increased trade frictions, and a heightened state of economic uncertainty.
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Chatham House, 9th December 2024
Friday Reading Edition 232 (17th January 2025)
Geopolitics: what Chatham House’s experts will be keeping their eyes on in the year ahead.
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Allianz
Friday Reading Edition 232 (17th January 2025)
The most important corporate concerns for the year ahead, as ranked by 3,700+ risk management experts from more than 100 countries and territories.
Control Risks
Friday Reading Edition 232 (17th January 2025)
In 2025, global risks to business will be driven by power vacuums and polarisation, conflict and violence, and the double-edged sword of technological advancement. RiskMap is the annual forecast of business risks compiled by Control Risks experts worldwide.
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Gallagher
Friday Reading Edition 232 (17th January 2025)
Faced with a more uncertain risk landscape and emerging trade and regulatory pressures, firms are focused on building in contingencies.