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7 - The World after 1989: ‘Unipolarity’, Globalisation and the Rise of the Rest

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 February 2019

Amitav Acharya
Affiliation:
American University, Washington DC
Barry Buzan
Affiliation:
London School of Economics and Political Science
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Summary

This chapter covers ir from the end of the Cold War to 2017. Like Chapter 3 it is a story of two halves. In the first half, up to 2008, version 1.1 Western GIS reached its peak and the framings of unipolarity and globalisation dominated understanding. In the second half, after 2008, the relative decline of the West became increasingly obvious, and the transition into version 1.2, deep pluralist GIS, began. The core expands, and the periphery shrinks, and ir within the core is increasingly about relations among a set of great powers – Russia, China, Japan, the EU and India – and between them and the US as the declining superpower. At the same time, core and periphery become ever more deeply entangled by a set of shared-fate issues ranging from nuclear proliferation, terrorism and migration; through management of the global economy, environment and cyberspace; to a set of interventions by core powers into periphery conflicts.
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The Making of Global International Relations
Origins and Evolution of IR at its Centenary
, pp. 179 - 217
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2019

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