G-7 and BRICS visions of the future: Coercive unipolarity or cooperative multipolarity
thetransnational.substack.com
By Richard Falk Professor Emeritus at Princeton University & TFF Associate When the Cold War ended in 1991, the West, and particularly the United States, found itself at a fork in the road. One road led to peace, justice, cooperation, nuclear disarmament, a revitalised UN, inclusiveness, pluralism, human rights, multilateralism, fair trade, regulated markets, food security, energy transition, sustainability, and humane governance. The other road led to militarism, intervention, warmongering, nuclearism, conflict, sanctions, regime-changing interventions, multiple trends toward inequality, predatory neoliberal globalisation, hegemony and geopolitical primacy.
G-7 and BRICS visions of the future: Coercive unipolarity or cooperative multipolarity
G-7 and BRICS visions of the future: Coercive…
G-7 and BRICS visions of the future: Coercive unipolarity or cooperative multipolarity
By Richard Falk Professor Emeritus at Princeton University & TFF Associate When the Cold War ended in 1991, the West, and particularly the United States, found itself at a fork in the road. One road led to peace, justice, cooperation, nuclear disarmament, a revitalised UN, inclusiveness, pluralism, human rights, multilateralism, fair trade, regulated markets, food security, energy transition, sustainability, and humane governance. The other road led to militarism, intervention, warmongering, nuclearism, conflict, sanctions, regime-changing interventions, multiple trends toward inequality, predatory neoliberal globalisation, hegemony and geopolitical primacy.