The autocratic challenge to democracies, a two-systems rivalry, large dominance of realpolitik and the emergence of big tech powerhouses as global players are the strategic matches of our times. To this adds the COVID-19 pandemic as a polycrisis, for some, the end of the Unit-ed Nations.
How would a digitalised, environmentally sustainable and gender-sensitive world look like in 2050?
In the manifesto “Future Global Governance”, co-authors revisit the changed context for mul-tilateralism and view new forms of anticipatory human-centred governance. The book re-examines universalism, strategic autonomy and resilience against today’s power projections.
Ursula Werther-Pietsch (ed.) is a profound connoisseur of multilateral system thinking. She published widely on human security, UN peace and security architecture and the Collective System of Security.
Ursula Werther-Pietsch
Ursula Werther-Pietsch is a lecturer of International Law and international Relations at University of Graz. Assignments at Austrian Ministry for European and International Affairs, National Defence Academy and the Federal Chancellery. Advisor of the Academic Forum for Foreign Policy. Member of the Scientific Commission of the Ministry of Defence. Founder of the magazine Juristische Ausbildung und Praxis. Co-editor of The Defence Horizon Journal Special Edition. Main lecture at Global Studies on multilateral system thinking.
autocratic challenge COVID-19 International Law multilateral system thinking Collective System of Security Globales Regieren Global Studies international Relations pandemic strategic autonomy Global Governance multilateralism Realpolitik