ABSTRACT

Today, the debate on world order is intense. As is always the case in times of transition, the global restructuring of international affairs is generating a deep reflection on how the world is, and how it should be reorganized. After the long frozen period of the cold war and the subsequent years marked by US unipolarism, the world has begun the new millennium with profound shifts. The relative decline of the USA, the crisis in the European Union, the consolidation of the BRIC emerging economies, and the diffusion of the power to non-state actors all constitute significant elements that demand a new conceptualization of the rules of the global game.

In this pluralist and changing context, a number of different narratives are presented by the key actors in the international system. This book analyses these narratives in comparative terms by putting them in the wider framework of the transformation in global governance.

chapter |9 pages

Introduction

The debate on global order in a changing world

part I|47 pages

Trends in global governance

chapter 1|12 pages

Our new and better world

chapter 2|10 pages

Uncertain global governance

chapter 3|12 pages

Regionalism and global governance

part III|43 pages

Conclusions

chapter 10|21 pages

Dysfunctional domestic politics

Dilemmas for the US and the EU in a changing world