Magazine Article - TIME / time.com
Former Australian PM Kevin Rudd: How to Fix the United Nations
In an age of a fracturing political support for the European Union, the re-birth of American isolationism, the growing international political confidence on the parts of both Russia and China, the daily threat of violent jihadism and a chronically weak global economy, deep questions have arisen about the long-term durability of what we continue to blithely refer to as the “post-war global order.”
The uncomfortable truth is that many of the assumptions underpinning the current order are under profound challenge. Geopolitically, U.S.-China and U.S.-Russia relations are more unstable than they have been in a quarter of a century, even as Russia-China relations have rarely been closer. Geoeconomically, despite the Chinese economic slowdown, China remains on track to surpass the U.S. as the biggest economy in the world sometime next decade—the first time since the reign of Britain’s King George III that a non-western, non-democratic, non-English speaking country has occupied this position.
Meanwhile the dynamics of globalization, driven by finance and technology, are compounding in speed, intensity and complexity.
Continue reading: http://time.com/4473978/united-nations-kevin-rudd-reform/
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For Academic Citation:
Rudd, Kevin. “Former Australian PM Kevin Rudd: How to Fix the United Nations.” TIME / time.com, August 31, 2016.
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In an age of a fracturing political support for the European Union, the re-birth of American isolationism, the growing international political confidence on the parts of both Russia and China, the daily threat of violent jihadism and a chronically weak global economy, deep questions have arisen about the long-term durability of what we continue to blithely refer to as the “post-war global order.”
The uncomfortable truth is that many of the assumptions underpinning the current order are under profound challenge. Geopolitically, U.S.-China and U.S.-Russia relations are more unstable than they have been in a quarter of a century, even as Russia-China relations have rarely been closer. Geoeconomically, despite the Chinese economic slowdown, China remains on track to surpass the U.S. as the biggest economy in the world sometime next decade—the first time since the reign of Britain’s King George III that a non-western, non-democratic, non-English speaking country has occupied this position.
Meanwhile the dynamics of globalization, driven by finance and technology, are compounding in speed, intensity and complexity.
Continue reading: http://time.com/4473978/united-nations-kevin-rudd-reform/
Want to Read More?
The full text of this publication is available via the original publication source.- Recommended
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Audio - Harvard Environmental Economics Program
Looking Ahead to COP-26: A Conversation with Kelley Kizzier
Magazine Article - Resources Magazine
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Policy Brief - Quarterly Journal: International Security
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Discussion Paper - Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs, Harvard Kennedy School
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