A World Between Orders | Foreign Affairs Interview Podcast

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  • Опубликовано: 27 июл 2024
  • Foreign Affairs invites you to listen to its podcast, the Foreign Affairs Interview. This episode with Shivshankar Menon was originally published on January 26, 2023.
    To hear Western leaders tell it, the outcome of Russia’s war in Ukraine will determine whether the international rules-based order survives. If Russian President Vladimir Putin wins in Ukraine, the laws and norms that are supposed to protect sovereignty will be exposed as useless. But what if that order is already broken, and there is no going back? The international system’s response to recent transnational challenges-whether it’s climate change, conflict, the pandemic, or the global debt crisis-has been deeply inadequate, especially for the “global South.” Much of the world can see that the stakes are high in Ukraine, especially for European security-but does not share the view that the outcome will fundamentally change how the world is governed.
    In recent essays for Foreign Affairs, Shivshankar Menon, who served as national security adviser to Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh from 2010 to 2014, explores the failures of the current world order and examines what could replace it. He has also served as India’s foreign secretary and as the country’s ambassador to Israel, Sri Lanka, China, and Pakistan. He is the author of India and Asian Geopolitics: The Past, Present.
    We discuss what’s at stake in Ukraine, India’s place in this changing world, and what order could emerge from today’s great-power competition.
    SOURCES FOR THIS EPISODE
    “Nobody Wants the Current World Order” by Shivshankar Menon
    www.foreignaffairs.com/world/...
    “The Fantasy of the Free World” by Shivshankar Menon
    www.foreignaffairs.com/articl...
    “How India and China Can Keep the Peace” by Shivshankar Menon
    www.foreignaffairs.com/articl...

Комментарии • 5

  • @testuser8600
    @testuser8600 Год назад +10

    Always a pleasure to listen to SSM.

  • @dgib1694
    @dgib1694 Месяц назад

    The way the world reacted to the pandemic was perhaps not ideal but there were encouraging signs in it. For example the EU, which is made of sovereign countries, managed to share vaccines and as a whole borrowed money for the crisis. A significant number of vaccine shots were also given between different parts of the world, be it from China or from EU.

  • @noahway13
    @noahway13 Год назад +1

    Comparing response to Pandemic vs HIV was sketchy. Two totally different scenarios.

  • @ahsanmohammed1
    @ahsanmohammed1 Год назад +1

    Global South term not accurate.