The post-Second World War global order is unravelling. While the system had been on shaky ground for years, the COVID-19 pandemic pushed many assumptions resting on this 80-year-old architecture over the edge. Today, calls for change reverberate louder, a new era of great-power competition has set in, frustration with the current system of global governance has grown, and globalisation and multilateralism are facing stronger headwinds.
Authors
- Attribution
- Kabir Taneja and Natalie Boyse, Eds., The Yerevan Primer: A World in Transition , September 2024, Observer Research Foundation.
- Pages
- 72
- Published in
- India
Table of Contents
- Introduction 4
- Kabir Taneja and Natalie Boyse 4
- Emerging Economic Challenges and Georgia’s Response 7
- Victor Kipiani 7
- The Role of Minilateralism in the Future of Global Governance and Security 12
- Marianna Albuquerque 12
- All at Once: Multilateralism Amid a Polycrisis 17
- Erin Watson and Ratu Bintang Assyifa Arweys 17
- Iran in the Era of Central Eurasian Connectivity 23
- Vali Golmohammadi 23
- Protecting Europe with Firepower and Democratic Resilience 30
- Sarah Bressan 30
- Gulf States and Economic Opportunities in Central Asia 36
- Jonathan Fulton 36
- The Changing Character of War 42
- Raj Shukla 42
- Is the World Ready for the Next Pandemic? 47
- Wanjiru Munene 47
- The Cost of a Climate Transition on Women 53
- Karuna Kumar 53
- The Regional Security Architecture of the Asia-Pacific at the Crossroads 60
- Rouben Azizian 60
- India-Armenia Partnership: Onward to the Next Phase 66
- Reena Pandey 66