Emergence of Neo-Royalism challenging Institutionalised International Order | Current Affairs | Vision IAS
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In Summary

  • World politics sees neo-royalism and neo-feudalism, with leaders like Trump symbolizing a shift away from institutionalized foreign policy.
  • Neo-royalism concentrates power in a leader ruling through loyalists, while neo-feudalism disperses power to private actors like tech giants.
  • Emerging challenges include erosion of the rule-based international order, weaponization of economic tools, and weakening of state institutions.

In Summary

World politics is witnessing neo-royalism and neo-feudalism and US President Donald Trump is seen as a symbol of this wider shift among patterns in Russia, China and Turkey.

  • From the 17th century onwards, and especially through the 19th and 20th centuries, foreign policy ceased to be the private enterprise of kings and became a rational, institutionalised activity
  • However, the weakening of bureaucracies, the erosion of elite authority, emergence of transnational technology giants and the rise of personalised politics have resulted in this shift that resembles our pre-modern past.

Neo-Royalism and Neo-Feudalism

  • Neo-royalism: Concentration of power in a sovereign leader, ruling through loyalists rather than institutions, challenging institutional, rule-based international order and multilateralism.
    • Power is vertically centralized around dense social ties that create personal loyalty and connections. 
    • Policies are driven by personal preferences, grievances, and transactions, not institutionalised national interest.
  • Neo-Feudalism: Disperses power across private actors and transnational networks that undermine state authority. 
    • Examples: Tech giants controlling digital spaces, platforms like Starlink and social media influencing politics, war, and peace.
    • Resembles medieval order with multiple overlapping authorities.

Emerging Challenges from Neo-Royalism & Neo-Feudalism

  • Erosion of Rule-Based International Order: Weakening of multilateral institutions (UN, WTO, NATO) as leaders prioritise personal authority. 
    • Example: US withdrawal from 66 international organisations.
  • Weaponisation of Economic Tools: Tariffs, sanctions, market access used as tools of coercion, threatening global supply chains and economic stability.
  • Weakening of State Institutions: Decline of bureaucratic autonomy and expert-led decision-making by legislature, etc.
  • Rise of Private Power: Tech corporations and digital platforms exert quasi-sovereign influence via data and narratives.
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Weaponisation of Economic Tools

The strategic use of economic instruments such as tariffs, sanctions, and control over market access by states to coerce or influence other countries. This practice can disrupt global supply chains and threaten economic stability.

Transnational technology giants

Large technology corporations that operate across national borders, possessing significant influence over global communication, data, and digital infrastructure. Their power can rival that of nation-states in certain domains, impacting economics, politics, and social narratives.

Multilateralism

A foreign policy approach characterized by cooperation and agreement among multiple countries, often through international organizations and treaties. This contrasts with unilateralism or bilateralism.

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