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1 |
ID:
188488
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Summary/Abstract |
SCHOLARS began to react to the rapid transformation of the world order at the first signs that the US was losing its supposedly indisputable global leadership.1 The main reason for the revision of the unipolarity of the world order was not so much the US's loss of its economic, military, and political superiority as the fact that Francis Fukuyama's declared "end of history," pursued by the US after World War II, never materialized. Numerous publications emerged noting the decline of the Western liberal democratic model of social development.
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2 |
ID:
160592
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Summary/Abstract |
THE WORLD expert and academic community has been and remains very much interested in the prospects of social development of the countries united by the post-Soviet space.
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3 |
ID:
189782
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Summary/Abstract |
THE problem of determining megatrends - the key global processes that set the directions of civilizational development - has preoccupied scientists and scholars for decades owing to purely scientific considerations as well to the practical tasks of determining the future contours of planetary civilization.
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4 |
ID:
158181
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Summary/Abstract |
TODAY'S SOCIETY undergoes processes that, besides exceptional dynamism, are marked by a new kind of complexity as a result of interaction between social systems, subsystems and actors. Economics increasingly manifest themselves through politics - something that the founders of Marxism pointed out a long time ago, - and there are more and more spheres where the humanities overlap with politics. Issues that are rooted in the past have become a routine technology for political rivalry. So has the languages issue as a means of domination in a specific sociocultural space and as a mechanism for the pursuit of specific political interests.
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5 |
ID:
185034
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Summary/Abstract |
DESPITE the multidirectional trends evident in the modern planetary landscape, overall, its emerging architecture is tending toward interconnectedness. The new civilizational image is universality and indivisibility. The world is becoming so interconnected that we can talk about a different level of scientific reflection expressed in Parag Khanna's vision of possibly establishing "Connectography" as an academic discipline, with the maxim "Connectivity is destiny" serving as its refrain
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