World Politics since 1989

World Politics since 1989

by Jonathan Holslag
World Politics since 1989

World Politics since 1989

by Jonathan Holslag

Paperback

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Overview

1989 ushered in a new age of freedom and prosperity. Thirty years later, the golden era is over. What went wrong? How did the age of globalization – of growing connectivity, affluence, and growth – give way?

Jonathan Holslag navigates through the calm seas and rip tides of global politics from the Cold War to Russia's invasion of Ukraine. He tells a story of faltering momentum and squandered opportunities that explains how the West's sources of strength were lost to rising consumerism, unbalanced trade, and half-hearted diplomatic engagement. All the while, other powers, like China and Russia, grew stronger. With his trademark verve, Holslag untangles the threads of this story to reveal that it was not so much the ambition of China, the cunning of Putin, or the greed of African strongmen that led the world into this dark place; it was the failure of the West to listen to its people, to show clear leadership, and reinvent itself, in spite of ample evidence that things were going awry.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781509546732
Publisher: Polity Press
Publication date: 08/28/2023
Pages: 432
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 1.40(d)

About the Author

Jonathan Holslag is a professor of international politics at the Free University of Brussels, where he teaches diplomatic history and international politics. He guest lectures at various civilian and military academies across the world and has advised European institutions, NATO and national governments on international security. He is the author of several acclaimed books, including A Political History of the World, The Silk Road Trap and China's Coming War with Asia, which have been translated into many languages. He has appeared on CNN, the BBC, Bloomberg, CCTV and Al Jazeera, and written for publications such as the Le Monde, Financial Times and The Guardian.

Table of Contents

Maps, figures and table

The pendulum

OVERTURE

1. Progress

2. A doubtful victory

3. The new order seen from elsewhere

ACT 1 (1989-2000)

4. Missed opportunities

5. Reluctance to lead

6. Making rivals rich

ACT 2 (2000-2010)

7. Disregard and decadence

8. A foreign policy of recklessness

9. Globalization and the return of power politics

ACT 3 (2010-2020)

10. What the hell happened?

11. Abdication

12. Fragmented and turbulent

Watershed

Acknowledgements

Notes

Further reading

Index

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