ABSTRACT

Power sharing beyond demography and geography Previous discussion points to the fact that the twenty-first century’s political communities may no longer be bound by traditional geographic boundaries but rather by the prevalence of cultural affiliations as a mean for collective action. This transformation from national to communal modes of collectivism is primarily due to globalization’s double movement. After all, globalization has been responsible for the declining strategic relevance of geopolitics, affecting regions and countries of multi-communitarian constituencies.