It feels only too clear that the global order that defined geopolitics, geoeconomics, and life in the world’s constituent parts is changing fundamentally. But what lies on the other side of this change? It’s a sucker’s bet to try to predict that outcome with any precision; there’s just too much fundamental uncertainty. As Antonio Gramsci said (of another era, though he might have been describing ours): “The old world is dying, and the new world struggles to be born: now is the time of monsters.”
Still, it’s important that we try. It’s only by wrestling with what’s going on to determine what’s possible, then what’s desirable, that we can shape a future in which we want to live.
The models and metaphors that we use are key to that wrestling. Our natural inclinations seem to tend in one of two directions. Either we tweak the models we have to try to accomodate the change that we see… which seems to work until (given that the change just keeps on coming) it doesn’t. Or we flip to the opposite– we imaging that everything simply falls apart. In geopolitical/geoeconomic terms, we assume that we get an incrementally-revised version of the world order that we’ve known; or we imagine dissolution (into what tends to be called a “multi-polar” world)… neither of which imagines materially different world orders that, as hard as they are to describe, are entirely plausible. Part of our problem in visualizing those new orders is our lack of models and metaphors for them…
The two pieces featured here posit frameworks and metaphors that, while they may or may not prove to be “accurate” in any comprehensive way, can help us open our thinking, and model the ways in which fresh metaphors can help us see problems anew and find new solutions.
First a piece from Trine Flockhart, from the Global (Dis)Order International Policy Programme of the British Academy and The Carnegoe Endowment for International Peace, part of a recent book)…
Is global order a thing of the past? Is the liberal international order fraying and what is happening to previously stable alliances and cooperative relationships such as the transatlantic relationship or the relationship between the United States and Canada? Not such a long time ago, these questions would have been regarded as alarmist, but today the prospect of large-scale order transformation is part and parcel of daily debates. This rupture is probably as important as the transformation that followed the end of the Second World War, and together with the simultaneous transformations in technology and science, the impact on people and societies may well be on par with the Industrial Revolution. As Gramsci wrote from his prison cell, we live ‘in times of monsters’ where ‘the old world is dying and the new one struggles to be born’(Gramsci & Buttigieg 1992). In these circumstances, we see the political consequences in populist parties as voters seek certainty in an uncertain and turbulent world, whilst policymakers struggle to find their feet in the emerging world and seek to manage the fallout from the ending of the old world.
To ensure that the policy decisions of today are relevant for the geopolitical reality of tomorrow, policymakers must have a clear sense about the likely outcome of the ongoing transformation – in other words what kind of global order will be in place and what kind of relationships can be expected within it? These are big and complex questions that have no easy answers, yet many scholars and policy practitioners seem to already have their answer – the world will be multipolar (Ashford 2023; Bekkevold 2023; Borrell 2021). At least anecdotally, it seems there is widespread agreement that the international system is transforming from a unipolar system anchored in American hegemony, to a multipolar system reflecting the shift of power to a larger number of states. However, although the idea that the international system will be multipolar is persuasive, and although the use of analytical concepts such as polarity can be useful for gaining an overview of complex matters, we must be aware that polarity as a concept rests on a specific form of analysis that tends to emphasize states, sameness, power and interest, and which is only partially sighted when it comes to values, identities, lesser powers and complexity. I worry that the focus on multipolarity, means that policymakers are trying to understand the current order transformation through conceptual lenses that are blurred and not very relevant.
This article presents a different position. It starts from the counterintuitive position that it is logically implausible for the global ordering architecture to return to an international system that was in place a century ago. Those suggesting that we are currently witnessing a return to multipolarity emphasise shifts in the global distribution of power and the rising number of powerful states, most notably China. These are certainly important changes, but The arrival of the multi-order world and its geopolitical implications other important changes are overlooked, which suggest a fundamentally different global ordering architecture is in the making. Continuing to portray the world as multipolar belies the complexity, significance, and extent of many other important changes. This paper presents an alternative interpretation of the ongoing global order transformation, demonstrating why it will be neither bipolar nor multipolar but rather multi-order.
A multi-order world is a global ordering architecture consisting of several international orders. Gramsci was right that order transformations take time, so the multi-order architecture is still in development, but can be glimpsed through the existence of three independent international orders already clearly visible within the global ordering architecture – the American-led liberal international order (albeit that American leadership under Trump is currently in question), the Russian-led Eurasian order, and the Chinese-led Belt and Road order.1 Other orders and other forms of relationships of importance are also in the making suggesting a more complex architecture than a multipolar one. The paper does not claim to present a full picture of the emerging ordering architecture but seeks merely to demonstrate the importance of embracing new thinking to contemplate the possibility of an entirely new form of international system in which multiple international orders with very different dynamics and different behavioural patterns make up the global ordering architecture. The perspective brings into light important relationships and dynamics that are not readily apparent in the multipolar perspective – especially that relationships within orders are just as important as relations between different international orders, and it leaves room for considering other aspects than powershifts and for acknowledging the importance of other actors than just a handful of “pole states”. I argue that awareness of the subtle differences between the multi-order architecture and more traditional polarity-based understandings is an essential first step towards timely strategic policymaking fit for the multi-order world.
The paper proceeds in four moves. First, I outline three significant events over the past four years which only partially fit the polarity-based narrative. Second, I outline the multi-order perspective by focusing on order as a condition, a social domain, and as practices of ordering. Thirdly, I show how changes in three characteristics of the global system indicate a multi-order world rather than a multipolar one. Finally, I briefly consider some of the broader geopolitical implications of a multi-order world and demonstrate the importance of ordering dynamics within and between international orders. The picture that emerges challenges some of the most foundational assumptions about international relations and global order including the prospect of achieving convergence around common rules in multilateral governance to meet shared challenges…
The second, by Jessica Burbank, takes a different– and in some ways, more provocative– tack…
… A new world order is here. States (countries) are no longer the highest form of power globally. Power has shifted to wealthy individuals who work in groups and operate across borders: syndicates of capital.
Syndicates of capital cannot be categorized as legal or illegal. They exist primarily in the extralegal sphere, where either no regulations apply to their behavior or, where laws do exist, there is no entity powerful enough to enforce them in a manner that asserts control over the syndicates’ behavior.
In many occasions, capital is both the power source for syndicates, and the shared goal. Wealthy individuals form syndicates if their strategic objectives align. Those objectives typically revolve around securing new capital flows and preserving existing ones. Syndicates’ power is vast but fragile. If all members of a syndicate were cut off from accessing capital and the resources they control, they would lose their power.
Author’s Note: Sorry to disappoint the conspiracy theorists, but I am not speaking of secret societies, the illuminati, or a cabal. Syndicates of capital do not hide their power, nor do they operate in secret. Their multi-billion dollar deals and contracts are publicly disclosed. They are also not united in ethnic background, religious, or political beliefs.
It is not enough to say: ‘democracies are being replaced with oligarchies because wealthy individuals have too much power in society.’ That may be true, but is not the full picture. Oligarchies are states run by a small group of wealthy individuals. That may accurately describe the politics of one nation, but it does not suffice to describe how power is organized on a global scale.
‘Global oligarchy’ also falls short of describing how power is organized in our world, because there is not one small group of wealthy individuals, there are many, and they compete. Still, the identification of oligarchs is useful for global political analysis because many of the oligarchs within a state also operate globally as leaders or members ofsyndicates of capital.
The new world order emerged before it could be identified. Platitudes like: “our world has gone crazy,” served as an emotional crutch, and an implicit acknowledgement that we lack a sound analysis of contemporary global power. What has felt like an ineffable force, an inexplicable undercurrent of darkness, is the ambiance of global dominion by syndicates of capital.
Though abstract, examining how global power is organized is essential to understanding the world we live in. Developing a coherent framework for evaluating global affairs allows us to more effortlessly make sense of current events. You’ll be surprised how quickly things click and how easily your mind makes connections when you absorb the news with a conception of syndicates of capital…
As we muse on metaphors, we might recall that it was on this date in 1279 that Mongol forces led by Kublai Khan were victorious at the Battle of Yamen— ending the Song dynasty in China. Kublai has already conquered parts of northern and southern China, and had declared the Yuan dynasty (with himself as the emperor “Great Yuan”). With the fall of the Song, the Mongols ruled all of continental East Asia under Han-style Yuan rule, which was a division of the Mongol Empire.
Mongol invasion of the Southern Song dynasty, 1234–1279 (source)
Is it any wonder that older friends and relatives abroad still ask, when learning that one is from the Western U.S.: do you know any cowboys? Anyone with a sense of America formed from the movies that have been this nation’s leading cultural ambassador for most of the last century might well assume that we are a nation of wranglers, gangsters, reporters, and lawyers.
The invaluable Moira Finnie, blogger for TCM, moderator of the online forum Silver Screen Oasis and proprietor of the blog Skeins of Thought, strikes a blow for the unsung, singling out the librarian:
This rumination on work in the movies began while I was reading the new memoir, Quiet Please, (Da Capo Press). The author offers a look at the experiences of a young, male, very contemporary librarian named Scott Douglas from the other side of the reference desk… One amusing section of the book concerned the fact that Douglas felt that there was a serious dearth of librarians as role models in the movies. Sure, to the average person, “Marian the Librarian” in The Music Man (1964) may be the quintessential movie librarian. You know the type, frosty on the outside, potentially a molten hottie and closet romantic on the inside, all the while that “Prof. Harold Hill” is hoping she’s really that “sadder but wiser girl” he’s hoping to find in the hinterlands of Iowa during his travels…
Except for Noah Wyle’s three made-for-tv excursions as…(dramatic pause)…the nebbishy but dashing “Flynn Carsen” in The Librarian movies, there do seem to be paltry few positive images of librarians in the movies, especially for males…
Library Science teacher Ann Robinson pausing for a reflective smoke with Gene Barry before the destruction of the human race proceeds in The War of the Worlds (1953).
As we refrain from unnecessary noises, we might recall that it was on this date in 1271 that Kublai Khan renamed his empire “Yuan,” officially marking the end of the Song Dynasty (though Southern Song wasn’t fully conquered until 1276) and the start of the Yuan Dynasty of (Mongolia and) China. The Yuan Dynasty was a period of consolidation and centralization, and encouragement of science, technology, and trade, creating the China that Marco Polo found at the end of the Silk Road. It was also the period during which China developed drama and the novel, and saw a marked increased in the use of the written vernacular.
Readers will recall The Antikythera Mechanism (“A Connecticut Yankee in King Agamemnon’s Court?…“), the oldest known scientific computer, which was built in Greece probably around 100 BCE. It was recovered from a shipwreck in 1900; but its purpose remained a mystery for over a century, until archeologists and scientists realized its ingenious intent: it’s an extraordinarily-accurate astronomical clock that determines the positions of celestial bodies– an analog computer with over 100 gears and 7 differential gearboxes– accurate to a day or two over its range.
Having always loved complex mechanical devices, and never having fully outgrown LEGO, I decided to explore where computational mechanics and LEGO meet. This is not LEGO as toy, art, or even the MindStorms® fusion of LEGO and digital electronics. This is almost where Steampunk and LEGO meet. Hand cranked devices that perform complex mechanical tasks.
As we revel in the satisfaction of making round pegs fit, we might recall that it was on this date in 1271 that Genghis Khan’s grandson and Coleridge’s celebratee Kublai Khan renamed his empire “Yuan,” officially marking the start of the Yuan Dynasty of Mongolia and China. By 1279, the Yuan army had defeated the last resistance forces of the Song Dynasty, which it succeeded.
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