Abstract
This article is in fact a report from the discussion panel organised on
18 September 2018 during the Fourth National Political Science Congress
entitled The State in Times of Change. As part of the Congress, Professor
Józef M. Fiszer from the Institute of Political Studies of the Polish Academy
of Sciences, organised an interesting panel entitled ‘Poland’s Foreign Policy
in Times of Change in Europe and the World in the Twenty-First Century:
Directions, Goals, Forms, Opportunities and Threats’. Panellists, outstanding
specialists, who took part in it discussed goals, tasks, opportunities and threats
for Polish foreign policy in the twenty-first century. During the discussion
numerous interesting, theoretically and practically significant theses and
hypotheses were formulated. They are presented and analysed in this article.