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Non-Western Visions of International Order

Written by

Lucas de Oliveira Paes
Senior Research Fellow
Ayse Zarakol
Professor, University of Cambridge
Dylan M. H. Loh

Ed.

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Summary:

The scholarship on the concept of order has been expanding within international relations. The continuous upheaval of world politics first triggered a broad debate on the resilience of the liberal international order (LIO), which then led to scholarship on alternative conceptions of order, especially outside of the West. This review focuses on this body of research on non-Western views of order. It is structured geographically, taking a tour of scholarship from and on East and Southeast Asia, Latin America, Africa, South Asia and the Indo-Pacific, and Eurasia. Although each region has its own intellectual traditions, we observe that these views portray the LIO in a less idealized form, exposing its hierarchical and Western-centered nature. However, while pushing for more inclusive and plural arrangements, these critiques have not yet amounted to the articulation of radical alternative ordering projects.

Themes

  • International economics
  • Globalisation
  • Foreign policy
  • Europe
  • Russia and Eurasia
  • North America
  • South and Central America
  • Governance

Written by

Lucas de Oliveira Paes
Senior Research Fellow
Ayse Zarakol
Professor, University of Cambridge
Dylan M. H. Loh