The idea of a ‘Liberal International Order’ has a long and controversial history. Until 1989, it was a fiercely contested project, but during the ‘unipolar moment’ of the 1990s, it underwent an unprecedented upsurge and appeared to achieve hegemonic status. This article offers a retrospective analysis, viewing the ensuing cycle as a discursive metanarrative, and covering the ensuing overreach and its more recent unravelling. It concludes with an overview of alternative conceptions of liberal order, and some brief reflections on how a revised Liberal International Order (LIO) might regain some of the ground it has lost, and what that would involve.
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Laurence Whitehead
Journal of Asian and African Studies
University of Oxford
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Laurence Whitehead (Thu,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/6980fe48c1c9540dea81036b — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1177/00219096251380760