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The world is becoming more complex, fraught with increasing possibilities for conflict over national rivalries, economic competition, and cultural and ideological fault lines. This clear-eyed text offers a structured and theoretically grounded way to think about the forces that animate change and the alternative futures they may create. Donald Kelley views both contemporary reality and the future we face through the perspective of four different paradigms that shape our way of thinking about the world: The nation-state paradigm, built on the assumption that the traditional Westphalian nation-state remains the key building block of the present and the future, which leads us to predict the future in terms of the nature and alignment of nation-statesThe economic paradigm, built on the assumption that economic factors are increasingly important, which leads us to see the future in terms of factors such as interdependence, globalization, and trade as well as the growing opposition to these developments and the prioritization of national economic needsThe identity and culture paradigm, built on the distinct identities and cultures of nations and regions, which leads us to view the future in terms of conflicting culture-based communities transcending formal national or economic interestsThe ideology paradigm, based on a post-cold war reemergence of ideological conflict within and among nations, which leads us to view a world based on ideology-based conflictFrom these paradigms and their interactions, Kelley builds a series of possible alternative futures of the international system. His framework provides a unique way of looking at how and why the world is changing and the many different “futures”—some peaceful and productive, some warlike and destructive, and others simply dysfunctional—in which we might live.
Donald R. Kelley is professor of political science at the University of Arkansas, where he has taught international relations and comparative politics since 1980. He also served as a senior research fellow and then as director of the Fulbright Institute of International Relations.
1: Understanding a Changing World: The Future(s) of the International SystemWhy Future(s)?What Is an International System?What Is a Paradigm?Building Analytic Paradigms and Alternative FuturesParadigms in the Social Sciences Realism, Liberalism, and Constructivism The Four Paradigms What Comes Next? 2: The Nation-StateParadigm The Paradigm The Possible Futures A Hegemonic World A New Balance of Power in a Bipolar or Limited Multipolar WorldA Stable Multipolar World An Unstable Multipolar World 3: The Economic Paradigm The Paradigm The Possible Futures Globalization Advances Globalization Amended and Reconfigured Mercantilism 2.0 Toward Autarky, with a Touch of Anarchy 4: The Identity and Culture Paradigm The Paradigm The Possible Futures The Gradual Emergence of a Global Identity and Culture The Identity and Culture Paradigm Merges with the Nation-State Paradigm The Creation of an International System Based on the “Clash of Civilizations” 5: The Ideology ParadigmThe ParadigmThe Possible Futures A Universalistic and Humanistic Ideology Emerges Ideological Conflict Reemerges “National Ideology” Becomes the Dominant Fusion of National Identity and Ideology Populism Becomes the Dominant Paradigm Sources of Stability and Instability What Would a Populist World Look Like? 6: Where Do You Go from Here? What Have You Learned? How Many Alternative Futures Have We Created? How Can You Use This Framework? Index About the Author