The world today is more fragmented and multipolar than at any time in living memory. Many Americans envision a bipolar competition emerging between a subset of democracies and autocracies—effectively ...
The “unipolar moment” of American predominance is over. Long-term economic, demographic, and military trends have undeniably shifted global politics, and the United States now needs a strategy to ...
Multipolarity is the state in international relations in which no one or two countries dominate world politics. Rather, many countries come together to deliberate on important global issues. In such a ...