... security architecture, relying on existing institutions: the Union State, CSTO, EAEU, CIS, BRICS, SCO and ASEAN. Minsk has put forward an initiative to develop a Eurasian Charter for Diversity and Multipolarity—a strategic vision for a new system of international relations to replace the “rules-based” world order.
An important event of 2024 in this context is the expansion of the BRICS club (see
Figure 6
). Its combined economic power could potentially reach $67 trillion, surpassing the total GDP of the G7 countries.
Figure 6
. Economic potential ...
RIAC Working Paper No. 62 / 2022
RIAC Working Paper No. 62 / 2022
Practices and principles that underpin multilateralism are currently facing multiple challenges and major opposition, including one-sided rhetoric employed by leaders across the globe, a grave crisis of many multilateral organizations and regimes, both global and regional. Politicians are shifting the responsibility for the shortcomings of multilateralism onto one another, blaming their opponents for departing from legitimate multilateral...
... rather than pure ethanol as it is. Liberals hold on to the premise that states are well short of being stand-alone actors in international relations, as they are—to different extents—represented by various group interests being in complex interaction ... ... aromas of regional specifics, and the aftertaste of national biases and stereotypes.
Fyodor Lukyanov, Ivan Safranchuk:
Modern World Order: Structural Realities and Great Power Rivalries
For the last few decades, there have been repeated attempts to combine ...
... Russ.) URL:
https://russiancouncil.ru/analytics-and-comments/analytics/neizbezhnost-strannogo-mira/
(accessed 03.06.2021).
Kosolapov N.A. 2002. Globalizatsiya: ot miroporyadka k mezhdunarodno-politicheskoi organizatsii mira [Globalization: From the World Order to the International Political Organization of the World]. – Ocherki teorii i metodologii politicheskogo analiza mezhdunarodnykh otnoshenii [Essays on the Theory and Methodology of Political Analysis of International Relations]. Ed. by A.D. Bogaturov, N.A. Kosolapov, M.A. Khrustalev. Moscow: NOFMO. 390 p. (In Russ.)
Lukyanov F.A., Trenin D.V., Kortunov A.V., Sushentsov A.A., Suslov D.V., Silaev N.Yu., Murakhovskii V.I., Safranchuk I.A., Markedonov S....
... their allies against Syria on the 14th of April 2018 led to the conclusion that continuation of such actions would destabilize international relations. Negotiations on arms control, which previously were intensive, came to an end. This situation jeopardized ... ... precedes the eventual multi-polar transition. By and large, the Russian scientific community agrees with the thesis that the world order is in process of transformation from unipolar moment to the post-unipolar condition, but the terms to describe this ...
... being wrong, any mistake can become fatal for the weak.
These events return us to one of the basic questions of the science on international relations: What are the parameters of power enjoyed by modern government players? What makes some stronger and others ... ... consideration these nuances plus technological development and soft power indices.
Ivan Timofeev:
A New Anarchy? Scenarios for World Order Dynamics
However, universal power formulas have shortcomings. The first is that any global distribution of power will ...
... will attempt to outline possible ways of adapting the concepts of polarity, multipolarity, and world order to new international realities and draft scenarios for a future world.
The World Order and Power Poles: One, Several, or None?
The concept of ‘world order’ is among the most widespread in international relations. Often, it is used to characterize the existing balance of power, hierarchy, and the ‘rules of the game’ underpinning world politics. Not infrequently, it is described in terms of power and domination, as some centres of power ...
... unable to resist the aggressive unilateralism of the United States and are thus losing their former effectiveness before our very eyes.
Third, Trump’s presidency has very clearly and unequivocally marked a new historical milestone in the development of international relations. Before Trump came to power, there were still hopes that everything would somehow “work itself out,” that the outdated world order would somehow manage to stay in place and that some minor repairs would fix the old system. I think it is obvious to everyone today that minor repairs will not do the trick and that a fundamental restructuring of the entire world order is ...
... be blended and there will not be such a state in the whole world that one body is white, another yellow, and the third is black-skinned ... All will be nicely slightly dark-complexioned and look the same").
Ivan Timofev:
RIAC Working Paper “World Order Or World Anarchy? A Look at the Modern System of International Relations”
Such universalism, if realized, would result in a sharp decline of the complexity of the global society as a whole and the international system in particular. Reducing complexity, in turn, would dramatically increase the level ...
... the possible in our earthly world.
3D Chess
artonstreets.wordpress.com
Daniil Parenkov:
Conserve and Rule: Conservatism in the
22nd Century
The “non-western” countries themselves are not always eager to assume responsibility for the future of the international relations system
The 21
st
century world order, if it does indeed emerge, will have little in common with the liberal theories of the last century and with its foreign policy practices. Figuratively speaking, if the global politics of the 20
th
century could be compared to playing checkers ...