Debating Worlds: Contested Narratives of Global Modernity and World Order by Daniel Deudney, G. John Ikenberry, Karoline Postel-Vinay
Requirements: .PDF reader, 15.0 MB
Overview: By the last decade of the twentieth century, the great questions of modernity seemed to be answered. With the collapse of the Soviet Union and global communism, the liberal democratic capitalist project seemed to be the only one left standing, and in the 1990s the “liberal ideal” spread worldwide. Today, of course, this universalistic narrative rings hollow.
The global distribution of power has shifted and the preeminence of the West is receding as new directions for world order emerge. China is rapidly ascending as a peer competitor of the United States, bringing with it a powerful new global narrative of grievance and revision. Political Islam also burst onto the global scene as a multifaceted transnational movement reshaping regional political order and geopolitical alignments. With the rapid advance of climate change, there have arisen new narratives of global endangerment and dystopia. Far from converging, fragmentation and contestation increasingly dominate debates over world order.
Genre: Non-Fiction > History
Download Instructions:
https://ouo.io/qB1u1O
https://ouo.io/NaU1Hj