Handbook of Regional Conflict Resolution Initiatives in the Global South

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Algeria
BRI Project
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Central African Republic
Chile and regional peace
China's BRI
China’s BRI
Conflict resolution and positioning in the global power hierarchy
Conflict Resolution Initiatives
conflict resolution initiatives impact
Constructive engagement
Eastern Europe
ECOWAS Mission
Emerging middle powers versus peripheral leadership
Emerging powers
emerging powers analysis
Energy Resources
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Gdp Growth
Global Power Hierarchy
HDI
HIV
Human Immuno Deficiency Virus
Humanitarian Aid
India-Pakistan
International Law
international relations theory
KDF
Latin America
mediation in global south
Middle Power
Minsk Group
Nagorny Karabakh
Nagorny Karabakh Conflict
peacebuilding strategies
Perceptions of the role of Belarus in the Ukrainian conflict and the impact on the international system
power hierarchy dynamics
Public International Law
Regional Conflict Resolution
regional security studies
Saudi Arabia and security in the Middle East
Secondary Regional Powers
South and East Asia
South Sudan
Sub-Saharan Africa
The emergence of Azerbaijan as a regional power
The Middle East and North Africa
The regional (in)security of Iran
The shining black star of Africa
Theories of conflict resolution and international positioning in the Global South
Traditional Middle Power
Turkey
Vice Versa
Western Sahara

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032261980
  • Weight: 680g
  • Dimensions: 174 x 246mm
  • Publication Date: 13 Mar 2025
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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During the first half of the twentieth century, the international system was largely dominated by the USA and the colonial powers of western Europe. After the two world wars, the political and economic dominance of these states guaranteed them and their allies an almost complete control of world politics. However, as it is the norm in the international system, power structures are not immutable. After the end of the Cold War, rapid changes to the existing international hierarchies took place, as new countries from the so-called ‘‘developing world’’ began to emerge as crucial actors capable of questioning and altering the power dynamics of the world. It is therefore unthinkable to ignore emerging countries such as Russia, the People’s Republic of China, India, Brazil or South Africa in the decision-making process in today’s world order.

In addition, there is a group of smaller, yet increasingly important countries that, while acknowledging their inability radically to change the rules of the international system, are still eager to shift power relations and enhance their influence in the world. Argentina, Colombia, Egypt, Indonesia, Iran, South Korea, Mexico, Nigeria, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Turkey and Vietnam are generally recognised as part of this grouping of emerging powers from the Global South.

While there is a consensus amongst academics that emerging powers from the Global South must have a stabilising role within their own regions, previous analyses have focused primarily on the impact that emerging powers have had in their own regions’ conflict resolution initiatives. This volume, instead, aims to go beyond these analyses and provide new insights regarding the effect that this stabilising role has on the continental and global positioning of emerging powers. In other words, this book explores the relation between a country’s involvement in conflict resolution initiatives and its positioning in the international system. The volume will contribute to this approach using the perspective of academics and practitioners from countries of the Global South, particularly from states that have strengthened - or sometimes weakened - their position in the international hierarchy of power through a leading role in regional conflict resolution initiatives.