“The Rise of Power-Based Order in a Multi-Polar World: Implications for Global Governance”
Authors: Damaraju Pradeep Kumar
Affiliation: Associate Professor, K. K. C. College of Law, Puttur. Tirupati District. Andhra Pradesh. (https://orcid.org/0009-0000-6582-1481).
Abstract
a. The Emergence of Multipolarity in Global Affairs
A multipolar framework, marked by the dispersion of power among both established Western countries and emerging entities like China, India, and Russia, is replacing unipolar supremacy in the global order. This shift highlights a shift toward power-based hierarchies where state powers in the military, economic, and resource domains determine influence over normative standards. It has been exacerbated by economic realignments and technology breakthroughs. Because multipolar competition creates splintered authority and calls into question the universality of liberal ideals, global governance organizations such as the United Nations and World Trade Organization are under threat. Calls for reformed multilateralism that takes into account a variety of stakeholders are prompted by recent geopolitical tensions, such as the war between Russia and Ukraine and the competition between the United States and China, which serve as examples of how power imbalances triggering instability.
b. Power-Based Order and Its Ramifications
In a power-centric paradigm, coercive instruments such as sanctions, trade barriers, and military alliances supplant cooperative frameworks, leading to decentralized conflicts and hybrid threats across digital and economic spheres. This order amplifies the role of critical resources—energy, rare earths, and semiconductors—as levers of influence, compelling nations to prioritize resilience and self-sufficiency. For global governance, implications include diminished efficacy of bodies like the UN Security Council, paralyzed by veto dynamics amid rising authoritarian populism and alternative alliances such as BRICS expansion. Yet, this shift harbour’s opportunities for inclusive mechanisms, where minilateral coalitions address transnational issues like climate change and cybersecurity through adaptive diplomacy.