ONLINE | Changing Regimes, Changing World Order? Transregional Perspectives from Africa and Asia

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ONLINE | Changing Regimes, Changing World Order? Transregional Perspectives from Africa and Asia

September 21, 2023 , 9:00 am 10:30 am

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The geopolitics of the twenty-first century is increasingly characterized by a transformation of world order. In recent decades, the liberal international order, underpinned since the end of the Cold War by unipolar American hegemony, has been fundamentally destabilized by the rise of emerging powers across the global South – a process spearheaded by China and by organizational formations such as the BRICS. Economically, this process is fuelled by the ascent of dynamic growth centres beyond the Euro-American core of the world-system, and manifest in apparent departures from the policy orthodoxies of market liberalism. In the realm of global governance, southern emerging powers have unsettled the workings of the extant multilateral system and begun crafting an alternative architecture for multilateralism through institutions such as the New Development Bank.

How do we understand the nature of the political regimes driving this transformation of world order? This is an urgent question, especially considering deepening trajectories of autocratization across states in the global South. In India, for example, Narendra Modi and the increasingly authoritarian right-wing Hindu nationalist BJP government preside over an unprecedented trajectory of attack on democratic institutions and freedoms. Moreover, under Xi Jinping, China’s intensification of authoritarianism in its one-party state has been concomitant with the rollout of ambitious challenges to the liberal global order, through initiatives on “Global Development” and “Global Security.” And in South Africa, the erosion of the ANC’s post-apartheid hegemony has opened up space for the crystallization of a new right-wing populism grounded in xenophobic conceptions of nationhood and belonging. In this panel, we interrogate the significance and implications of the entangled unfolding of illiberal politics and transformation of world order for understanding the nature of our current turbulent conjuncture.

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Speakers

Suhas Palshikar
Chief Editor
STUDIES IN INDIAN POLITICS

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William Shoki
Deputy Editor
AFRICA IS A COUNTRY

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Kellee S. Tsai
Professor of Political Science
Dean of Humanities and Social Sciences
THE HONG KONG UNIVERSITY OF SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY

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Moderator

Alf Gunvald Nilsen
Professor of Sociology
Director, the Centre for Asian Studies in Africa
UNIVERSITY OF PRETORIA, SOUTH AFRICA

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