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Competing visions of international order: responses to US power in a fracturing world

Vinjamuri, Leslie; Aydin-Duzgit, Senem; Bajpaee, Chietigj; Cooley, Alexander; de Hoop Scheffer, Alexandra; Emmers, Ralf; Fravel, M. Taylor; Lind, Jennifer; Nasr, Vali; Quencez, Martin; Stelzenmuller, Constanze; Stuenkel, Oliver Della Costa; Vakil, Sanam; Zarakol, Ayse

Authors

Leslie Vinjamuri

Senem Aydin-Duzgit

Chietigj Bajpaee

Alexander Cooley

Alexandra de Hoop Scheffer

M. Taylor Fravel

Jennifer Lind

Vali Nasr

Martin Quencez

Constanze Stelzenmuller

Oliver Della Costa Stuenkel

Sanam Vakil

Ayse Zarakol



Contributors

Leslie Vinjamuri lv@soas.ac.uk
Editor

Abstract

The ‘liberal international order’ that has been predominant, if often controversial, since 1945 is being challenged as never before. This reflects factors both long-standing and recent: the rise of China; the frustrations and ambitions of countries – including many in the Global South – that associate the US-led liberal international order with deep hypocrisy; inequality within liberal democracies that has given rise to populism; Russian revanchism; and perhaps above all, the US’s more nationalist outlook and disruptive foreign policy since Donald Trump took office for the second time in early 2025. This paper takes stock of these developments, examines the US’s changing role and ambitions as a global power, and explores how 11 other key states are adapting to, positioning themselves, or seeking to disrupt or even undermine the existing order in this more fractured world. The paper, based originally on research for the US National Intelligence Council but revised and updated in this public version, considers how adversaries of the US seek to exploit what they see as the US’s declining global power, or to promote alternative visions. It also examines the challenges for US allies such as France, Germany and Japan, which have long been pillars of cooperative multilateralism but need to develop new ways to protect their interests and project power. And it explores how rising or middle powers, from Brazil to Saudi Arabia to India, are pursuing visions of international order that include strategies of non-alignment, strategic autonomy, and selective or transactional cooperation with the current order.

Citation

Vinjamuri, L., Aydin-Duzgit, S., Bajpaee, C., Cooley, A., de Hoop Scheffer, A., Emmers, R., Fravel, M. T., Lind, J., Nasr, V., Quencez, M., Stelzenmuller, C., Stuenkel, O. D. C., Vakil, S., & Zarakol, A. L. Vinjamuri (Ed.). Competing visions of international order: responses to US power in a fracturing world. Chatham House. https://doi.org/10.55317/9781784136383

Book Type Edited Book
Online Publication Date Mar 28, 2025
Deposit Date Apr 4, 2025
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
ISBN 9781784136383
DOI https://doi.org/10.55317/9781784136383
Publisher URL https://www.chathamhouse.org/2025/03/competing-visions-international-order