Description

Book Synopsis

The global distribution of power is changing. But how should we make sense of this moment of transition?

With the rise of new powers and the decline of seemingly unchallenged US dominance in world politics, a conventional wisdom is gaining ground that a new multipolar order is taking shape. Yet multipolarity – an order with multiple centres of power – is variously used as a description of the current distribution of power, of the likely shape of a future global order, or even as a prescription for how power ‘should’ be distributed in the international system.

To understand the power of the different – and sometimes competing – narratives on offer today about the changing global order, a global perspective is necessary. This book explores how the concept of a multipolar order is being used for different purposes in different national contexts. From rising powers to established powers, contemporary debates are analysed by a set of leading scholars to provide in-depth insight into the use and abuse of a widely employed but rarely explored concept.



Table of Contents

Introduction
1 The utility and limits of polarity analysis – Benjamin Zala

Part I: Rising and re-emerging powers
2 ‘Mirror, mirror on the wall’: China and the concept of multipolarity in the post-Cold War era – Nicholas Khoo and Zhang Qingmin
3 India: Seeking multipolarity, favouring multilateralism, pursuing multialignment – Ian Hall
4 Brazil: Pursuing a multipolar mirage? – Luis L. Schenoni
5 Multipolarity in Russia: A philosophical and practical understanding – Elena Chebankova

Part II: The unipole and its allies
6 Does the United States face a multipolar future? Washington’s response through the lens of technology – James S. Johnson
7 Japan and the dangers of multipolarisation – H.D.P. Envall
8 The uses and abuses of the polarity discourse in UK foreign and defence politics – David Blagden

Conclusion
9 Debating the distribution of power and status in the early twenty-first century – Benjamin Zala

Index

National Perspectives on a Multipolar Order:

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A Hardback by Benjamin Zala

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    View other formats and editions of National Perspectives on a Multipolar Order: by Benjamin Zala

    Publisher: Manchester University Press
    Publication Date: 26/10/2021
    ISBN13: 9781526159373, 978-1526159373
    ISBN10: 1526159376

    Description

    Book Synopsis

    The global distribution of power is changing. But how should we make sense of this moment of transition?

    With the rise of new powers and the decline of seemingly unchallenged US dominance in world politics, a conventional wisdom is gaining ground that a new multipolar order is taking shape. Yet multipolarity – an order with multiple centres of power – is variously used as a description of the current distribution of power, of the likely shape of a future global order, or even as a prescription for how power ‘should’ be distributed in the international system.

    To understand the power of the different – and sometimes competing – narratives on offer today about the changing global order, a global perspective is necessary. This book explores how the concept of a multipolar order is being used for different purposes in different national contexts. From rising powers to established powers, contemporary debates are analysed by a set of leading scholars to provide in-depth insight into the use and abuse of a widely employed but rarely explored concept.



    Table of Contents

    Introduction
    1 The utility and limits of polarity analysis – Benjamin Zala

    Part I: Rising and re-emerging powers
    2 ‘Mirror, mirror on the wall’: China and the concept of multipolarity in the post-Cold War era – Nicholas Khoo and Zhang Qingmin
    3 India: Seeking multipolarity, favouring multilateralism, pursuing multialignment – Ian Hall
    4 Brazil: Pursuing a multipolar mirage? – Luis L. Schenoni
    5 Multipolarity in Russia: A philosophical and practical understanding – Elena Chebankova

    Part II: The unipole and its allies
    6 Does the United States face a multipolar future? Washington’s response through the lens of technology – James S. Johnson
    7 Japan and the dangers of multipolarisation – H.D.P. Envall
    8 The uses and abuses of the polarity discourse in UK foreign and defence politics – David Blagden

    Conclusion
    9 Debating the distribution of power and status in the early twenty-first century – Benjamin Zala

    Index

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