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Nation-states are the fundamental building blocks of the modern international order. Order problematics and order systematics also originate from these building blocks. Today, the keystone nation-states are undergoing a severe test. The fragmentation of identities in the cultural dimension, arguments over sovereignty and legitimacy in the political dimension, the problematics of sustainable development in the economic field, and the ecological consequences of climate change, present national orders with serious challenges.
The geopolitical earthquake shook and tested the territorial existence of countries within its seismic zone; the security earthquake, the basis of states’ legitimacy; the global economic earthquake, states’ sustainability in terms of economic resources; and the structural earthquake, their institutional fabric.
The sixth chapter of the book discuses the possibility and conditions of inclusive national governance with its humane/cultural, geopolitical, legitimacy (freedom and security balance) and economic components.
Using the analogy of a devastating series of earthquakes, Davutoğlu provides a new theoretical approach, conceptualization, and methodology for understanding crisis in the post-Cold War era. In order to grasp the scale and scope of the ongoing crises we are experiencing today, Davutoğlu conceptualizes them as 'aftershocks', following in the wake of the four great 'quakes' that have shaken the world in recent times - namely, the geopolitical earthquake triggered by dissolution of the Soviet Union, 1991; the security earthquake, post- 9/11, 2001; the economic earthquake associated with the global economic crisis, 2008; and the structural earthquake of the Arab Spring, 2011. By contextualizing international order as being impacted by a number of intertwined processes, the book then looks to the possible futures ahead. Following his analysis of the ongoing systemic crisis, Davutoğlu forges a vision for a new order of global democracy, built from the rubble of the systemic earthquake.
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