Search results with tag "International order"
The end of liberal international order? - Princeton University
scholar.princeton.eduliberal internationalism. It is not simply a creature of American hegemony. It is a more general and longstanding set of ideas, principles and political agendas for organizing and reforming international order. In the most general sense, liberal internationalism is a way of thinking about and responding to modernity—its
THE UNITED NATIONS AND THE RULES-BASED …
www.unaa.org.auinternational order is the only alternative to international coercion by competing great powers, spheres of influence, client states and terrorist organisations. Moreover, global development through the achievement of the sustainable development goals (SDGs) can only occur within a rules-based international system based on commitment and respect.
U.S. Role in the World: Background and Issues for Congress
sgp.fas.orgthe liberal international order1 that the United States, with the support of its allies, created in the years after World War II. Although definitions of the liberal international order vary, key elements of it are generally said to include the following: respect for the territorial integrity of countries, and the unacceptability of
ROUNDTABLE: RISING POWERS AND THE INTERNATIONAL …
scholar.princeton.edu“American hegemony” from “the existing international order,” we can see a more complex set of relationships. The United States does not embody the inter-national order; it has a relationship with it, as do rising states. The United States embraces many of the core global rules and institutions, such as the United
Understanding the Current International Order
www.rand.orgLibrary of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data is available for this publication. ISBN: 978-0-8330-9570-1 For more information on this publication, ... Defense Research Institute, a federally funded research and develop-ment center sponsored by the …
International Order and the Future of World Politics
catdir.loc.gov4 An institutionalist view: international institutions and state strategies lisa l. martin 78 5 Is the truth out there? Eight questions about international order steve smith 99 Part II: Contenders: major powers and international order 121 6 Liberal hegemony and the future of American postwar order …
International relations: One world, many theories
www.columbia.eduUntil the 1980s, marxism was the main alternative to the mainstream realist and liberal traditions. Where realism and liberalism took the state system for granted, marxism offered both a different explanation for international conflict and a blueprint for fundamentally transforming the existing international order.