1. carnegieendowment.org

    Sep 18, 2024The vast majority of governments across the world would certainly go for the second option. They are well aware that the multiple interdependencies of a modern economy require close cooperation based on international rules and institutions. As a universal concept promoting such a constructive approach, the rules-based order makes eminent sense.
  2. parleypolicy.com

    The rules-based international order as we know it today is predicated on a system of laws, rules, and norms, and it has underpinned international interactions since its formal establishment in 1945. Whether its overall influence is positive or negative continues to be predicated on the actions of the members of the international community, but ...
  3. foreignpolicy.com

    Mar 27, 2023Of course, when U.S. officials say "rules-based order," they mean the current order, whose rules were mostly made in America. It's not the existence of rules per se that they are defending ...
  4. betterorderproject.org

    As the world transitions away from unipolarity, a dangerous competition over norms and rules is emerging that risks splitting the world into competing orders. Rather than a multipolar world, a multi- order world may emerge that pits the U.S.-led "rules-based international order" (RBIO) against rival arrangements, resulting in intensified ...
  5. academia.edu

    Essentially, the United States also envisions an international order based on universally accepted rules rather than the voluntarism of states, but a closer examination is needed to discern the specifics of these rules and how their "breakers" (U.S. great power rivals and so-called "rogue states") demonstrate "voluntarism". we delve ...
  6. interactives.lowyinstitute.org

    The rules-based order has "helped to lock in an alignment of world power that has been profoundly favourable to the United States", but America, and the order, over-reached. The United States should strengthen the order, argues Mazarr, by becoming more compliant with it, as well as letting others lead more often, and living "with the resulting ...
  7. carnegiecouncil.org

    Oct 5, 2023The "Death of God" and the "Rules-Based Order" The comparison is especially salient if we consider the current rules-based order—even if this order has been underwritten by U.S. power—to be ultimately a product of the Anglo-Protestant moral culture.Nietzsche was not so much against all morality per se but a particularly ressentimental version having an external locus of behavior ...
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