Contact us
[email protected] | |
3275638434 | |
Paper Publishing WeChat |
Useful Links
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License
Article
The World Order Crisis and the Future of Globalization
Author(s)
Andrey Kortunov
Full-Text PDF XML 824 Views
DOI:10.17265/2578-4269/2023.01.004
Affiliation(s)
Russian International Affairs Council, Russia
ABSTRACT
The notions of globalization have changed as the process has developed and its geographic spread has expanded and deepened. As we move into the 2020s, we can see that not all the hopes and expectations of 30 years ago have come to pass. Some predictions were postponed until some indefinite future date, while others were consigned to the scrap heap of human errors. The understanding of the driving forces behind globalization and its internal logic gradually changed. There were significant shifts in the dominant assessments of the complicated balance of the positive and negative aspects of globalization, its principal achievements and inevitable side effects. The systemic global crisis of 2020 has had a huge impact on the notions of globalization, placing the future of globalization as such in jeopardy and mercilessly revising the fundamental paradigms of globalization that had seemed unshakeable 30 years ago. Essentially, however, this crisis has merely articulated the changes in the discourse that had been brewing for a long time. The intellectual and political offensive of anti-globalism started long before 2020. Some think that the 2000s were the historically short “golden age” of globalization, and the 2010s demonstrated the limited and reversible nature of many of its trends.
KEYWORDS
future of globalization, ideological, liberal norms and values
Cite this paper
References