As these essays show, there is a lively debate over the future of world order.
Sergey Chugrow offers a dark portrait of the breakdown of what he calls Western
hegemony, driven in part by Russia's grievances and aggression in
Ukraine. He points to a future where international order will have a mix of
realist geopolitics and post-modern diversity. Keisuke Iida sees the debate over
liberal international order as a return to older debates about the viability of
hegemonic order and the role of regions and non-Western values in a
post-hegemonic global system. Peter Haas sees the debate over liberal
international order as a window onto various new forms of global governance.
Behind these important observations is Amitav Acharya's vision of a
post-American global order marked by diverse regional sub-systems; a world that
is globalized, diversified, and localized. These developments lead Acharya to
announce the ‘end’ of the American-led liberal
international order.