Does World Order Have a Future?

CNN Host Fareed Zakaria and Richard Haass examine the concept of “world order” and what to do to promote it in an age of revived great-power rivalry and global challenges.

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Episode Guests
  • Richard Haass
    President Emeritus, Council on Foreign Relations

Show Notes

About This Episode

 

Global challenges require international cooperation and norms, but the framework for these norms is shifting. In this episode of Nine Questions for the World, Richard Haass and CNN Host Fareed Zakaria examine the concept of “world order.” At the core of the conversation are two questions: What will the world order look like in the future? And what role should the United States play in the century to come?

 

This podcast series was originally presented as “The 21st Century World: Big Challenges and Big Ideas,” an event series in celebration of CFR’s centennial.  This episode is based on a live event that took place on November 16, 2021.

 

See the corresponding video here.

 

Dig Deeper

 

From Fareed Zakaria

 

The narrow path to liberal democracy,” Washington Post

 

Is the West’s future really so gloomy?,” Washington Post

 

The United States and China are locked in a Cold Peace,” Washington Post

 

From CFR 

 

Terrence Mullan, “The World Order Is Dead. Long Live the World Order.”

 

The Liberal World Order, With Robert Kagan,” The President’s Inbox

 

Kyle Evanoff, “Working on World Order: Help Wanted for Twenty-First-Century U.S. Leadership

 

Read More

 

Francis Fukuyama, “The Pandemic and Political Order,” Foreign Affairs

 

Walter Russell Mead, “A Liberalish New World Order,” Wall Street Journal

 

Stephen M. Walt, “The World Might Want China’s Rules,” Foreign Policy

 

Tom McTague, “Joe Biden’s New World Order,” Atlantic

 

Economics

Richard Haass and Minouche Shafik, director of the London School of Economics, assess the future of the labor market and examine how to provide workers with the skills and training they need in an era of ongoing technological change.

China

By all accounts, China is sure to have an outsized impact on the world over the next 100 years. Richard Haass and Elizabeth Perry, director of the Harvard-Yenching Institute, consider China’s rise and the implications for global order.   

Political History and Theory

Richard Haass and Margaret MacMillan, one of the world’s foremost historians, discuss how best to apply history to better understand current global challenges, including the erosion of democracy, the rise of China, and Vladimir Putin’s Russia.

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