ABSTRACT

This timely and original volume fills the gaps in the existing theoretical and philosophical literature on international relations by problematizing civilization as a new unit of research in global politics. It interrogates to what extent and in what ways civilization is becoming a strategic frame of reference in the current world order.

The book complements and advances the existing field of study previously dominated by other approaches – economic, national, class-based, racial, and colonial – and tests its key philosophical suppositions against countries that exhibit civilizational ambitions. The authors are all leading international scholars in the fields of political theory, IR, cultural analysis, and area studies who deal with various aspects of the civilizational arena.

Offering key chapters on ideology, multipolarity, modernity, liberal democracy, and capitalism, this book extends the existing methodological, theoretical, and empirical debates for IR and area studies scholars globally. It will be of great interest to politicians, public opinion makers, and all those concerned with the evolution of world affairs.

chapter 1|18 pages

Introduction

chapter 4|13 pages

Civilizational ideology in action

Challenge to the current world order

chapter 5|14 pages

World of worlds

The global order/disorder in its civilizational dimension

chapter 6|14 pages

Civilization and multipolarity

Converging for co-operation vs. interactions of the diverged

chapter 7|16 pages

Civilization and modernity

chapter 8|19 pages

Civilization and liberal democracy

chapter 10|11 pages

The Russia-civilization

Change and continuity

chapter 11|10 pages

Conclusions