The policy discussions in which I participated took place in different parts of the world. I have visited China more than twenty times and met China’s political leaders, as well as diplomats, academics, students and others. I had the opportunity to engage in a variety of interesting discussions. In the last four years, I particularly enjoyed working with students in China in my role as Senior Visiting Fellow of the Chongyang Institute for Financial Studies of Renmin University in Beijing. This experience also gave me an opportunity to speak to the Chinese media and to write commentary for various Chinese newspapers. Now I have selected my writings of the past years in which I have commented on the international system, China’s role, and international development.
These texts speak about the transformation characterizing our world today. They are organized around three major themes: the international system, China, and global development. I have selected my writings and organized them in a way that would serve two purposes. First, each of the twenty-five texts has a theme of its own, which is relevant to global transformation. Second, they should all shed light on the general picture of the world’s transformation. Admittedly, this approach carries a risk: it is not easy to ensure the necessary coherence and avoid unnecessary overlaps. Being aware of that risk, I selected the texts carefully and organized them in a manner that aims to maximize coherence and minimize unnecessary overlaps.
The reader should be able to see the “big picture” by reading the final chapter titled, “A World Transformed,” which is also the title of the book. However, in order to obtain a detailed presentation of the numerous questions discussed in the book, readers are advised to read individual chapters. Each of the book’s chapters, with the exception of the final one, contains a text prepared for its own occasion over the past years. I have edited them minimally, for example, by clarifying the year of several events mentioned in the text.
In preparing this book for publication, I was ably assisted by my friends from the Chongyang Institute for Financial Studies at the Renmin University in Beijing. I owe my gratitude to the Dean of the Institute, Dr. Wang Wen, the Deputy Dean, Mrs. Yang Chingqing, and Mr. Zhaoyu Guan who assisted me during my visits to China and helped with valuable information.
My special gratitude goes to Mrs. Božena Blix who provided valuable editing advice.
Danilo Türk
Ljubljana, 7 May 2019
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This book is part of the Peter Lang Regional Studies list.
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A Unipolar or Multipolar World?
The basic structure of the international system has been a lively subject of discussion since the end of the Cold War and continues to be of central importance today.1 Has the world become unipolar since the end of the Cold War? Is today’s world, almost a generation later, moving in the direction of multipolarity or has it already become multipolar? What are the implications of the current evolution?
These questions can be answered in three stages:
First, it is necessary to recognize the growing body of opinion that the world is becoming increasingly polycentric and, in some ways, clearly multipolar. In fact, the period of the seemingly unipolar world has been relatively short and always open to question.
Second, it is useful to keep in mind both the nature of change in the past few years and the nature of the current type of multipolarity. While there are certain similarities between our era and the one before World War I, there are also very important differences. These distinctions make our world very different, perhaps less dangerous, but also more complicated to manage, than the world that existed a century ago.
Third, general characterizations in terms of unipolarity versus multipolarity do not help much when dealing with the existing problems of international peace, security and development. It is therefore important to juxtapose the evolving general pattern of international relations with ones which are more specific ←3 | 4→and geographically defined, such as the patterns in Eurasia, in particular. This is necessary because the actual issues of international relations always arise in geographically-defined circumstances that also offer a large part of the solutions – to the extent that solutions are possible.
Let us therefore try to answer the questions in three stages.
First, a perfectly unipolar world is not possible and has never existed since the international scene constituted itself in the form of a pluralistic international community several centuries ago. The phenomenon of a pluralistic international system is usually traced back to the Peace of Westphalia of 1648, which ended religious wars in Europe. These questions of unipolarity and multipolarity can be discussed in the global context as well.
Unipolar systems did exist during a period of the Roman Empire, in the first centuries AD and in the Chinese Empire of the same period, during the Han Dynasty. Each of these empires represented the “known world” at the time and were characterized by a central, unipolar authority. In later historical periods, several empires existed simultaneously. For example, the Holy Roman Empire, the Ottoman Empire, the Moghul Empire and the Chinese Empire existed simultaneously in the sixteenth century. However, their interaction was limited, and it would be inaccurate to describe their simultaneous existence as a “multipolar world”. Multipolarity, as a meaningful political concept is a product of later periods of history, especially the nineteenth and the first half of the twentieth centuries. Subsequently, this multipolarity was changed into the bipolarity of the Cold War, which dominated the second half of the twentieth century.
In the 1990s, during the post-cold war era, the prevalence of the United States was sometimes compared to that of Ancient Rome. However, that was more an effective metaphor than a serious analytical proposition. A careful look at this era reveals a more complex relationship among the most powerful international players expressed, for example, in the trade-offs made in the United Nations Security Council in 1994, when Security Council permanent members tacitly agreed on their respective leading roles in the crisis situations in Haiti, the Caucasus and Rwanda. The geographic and historical reasons for the distribution of leading roles among the US, Russia and France were clear and were thus accepted de facto by the wider international community. The result was not unipolarity comparable with the Roman Empire, but rather a cooperative scheme resembling the concert of powers of the nineteenth century.
In the 1990s, the United States, the world’s leading military, economic and political power, was described as the “indispensable nation” by Madeleine Albright, the US Ambassador to the UN and later US Secretary of State.2 Let us think about this choice of words which conveys two messages: American power and centrality ←4 | 5→in international relations and also an invitation