Multipolar Order: Spheres of Influence & Strategic Positioning
Mapping the fragmentation of the post-Cold War order into overlapping Atlantic, Eurasian, and Strategic Autonomy spheres as regional powers reshape geopolitical architecture
Based on Comparative Western & Eurasian Analyst Frameworks
Atlantic Sphere
Eurasian Integration
Strategic Autonomy
Hedging / Hybrid
Structural Dynamics of Multipolarization
- Weaponization of Interdependence: Financial sanctions, maritime interdiction, and technology controls have become primary tools of statecraft, but their effectiveness depends on the targeted state's capacity to develop workarounds.
- Regionalization of Security: Regional powers are increasingly shaping outcomes through local alliances and asymmetric capabilities, reducing the decisive influence of external great powers.
- Decoupling of Economic and Security Spheres: Trade, investment, and technology flows are increasingly segmented along geopolitical lines, creating parallel systems that complicate crisis management.
- Erosion of Normative Consensus: Disagreements over the legitimacy of interventions, sanctions, and sovereignty claims reflect deeper contestation over the rules governing international conduct.
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