Georg Sørensen’s Rethinking the New World Order picks up many of those central themes and provides an elegant account of the nature and inherent tensions of global order a quarter century after the cold war … Rethinking the New World Order should be read by all hedgehogs and foxes with an interest in today’s world disorder because, ultimately, it is only the enlightened collaboration between them that can save us from a far fiercer creature, the black swan.
Jochen Prantl, Ethics and International Affairs
Introduction
1. Debating the Post-Cold War World Order
2. The Fragility of States
3. The Decreasing Importance of Interstate War
4. The Distribution of Power and World Order
5. Security : Intervention, Order and Legitimacy
6. Economics : the Dynamics of Globalization
7. Institutions : Governance of Gridlock?
8. Values : a Victory of Crisis of Liberalism?
9 : Conclusion.
This series is designed to provide a forum and a stimulus for leading scholars to address big issues in world politics in an accessible but original manner. A key aim is to transcend the intellectual and disciplinary boundaries which have so often served to limit rather than enhance our understanding of the modern world.
Each book addresses a major issue or event that has had a formative influence on the 20th century or the 21st century world which is now emerging. Each makes its own distinctive contribution as well as providing an original but accessible guide to competing lines of interpretation. Taken as a whole, the series will rethink contemporary international politics in ways that are lively, informed and - above all - provocative.