ID | 159463 |
Title Proper | Introduction: Ordering the world? Liberal internationalism in theory and practice |
Language | ENG |
Author | Ikenberry, G John ; Parmar, Inderjeet ; Stokes, Doug ; G. John Ikenberry Inderjeet Parmar Doug Stokes |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | The Trump presidency appears to personify, along with Britain's vote to withdraw from the European Union, a sense of deep crisis in the United States-led liberal international order (LIO). The two states that conceived and constructed a whole array of international institutions after 1945 now seem to be rejecting that order, or at the very least, demanding that its institutions either be reformed or recalibrated to better suit their purposes. However, both developments may signal a new phase in the evolution of the international system—more nationalistic, state-centric and transactional, in which costs and responsibilities are more widely shared and where the electorate questions the costs versus benefits of the postwar liberal consensus. This crisis has long been evident |
`In' analytical Note | International Affairs Vol. 94, No.1; Jan 2018: p.1–5 |
Journal Source | International Affairs Vol: 94 No 1 |
Key Words | Liberal Internationalism ; Theory and Practice ; Ordering the World |