From the rise of China to the wave of
instability still sweeping across the Arab World, and
from the crisis in the Euro-zone to the emerging effects
of climate change, our world is undergoing radical
change. New challenges are joining old and both a newly
vibrant global civil society and new technological and
media tools, are also offering up new ways of doing
diplomacy. Britain must adapt to this new environment if
it is not only to survive but thrive in the emerging
world of the 21st century. In this major new volume,
Douglas Alexander, Shadow Foreign Secretary, former
Secretary of State for International Development and
visiting fellow in Future Diplomacy at the Harvard
Kennedy School, and Dr. Ian Kearns, Chief Executive of
the European Leadership Network, bring together a group
of world class thinkers, diplomats, visionaries and
statesmen to review the major changes under way and to
explore their implications for our foreign
policy. Divided into five main sections, the book
first examines immediate challenges like Afghanistan and
Iran, before going on to assess the emerging
geo-political environment and the suitability of
existing international institutions to respond to the
wave of change. It considers global, even existential,
challenges like climate change, nuclear proliferation
and the fate of the world's poor and looks again at the
long-standing issue of humanitarian intervention in the
light of ongoing violations of human rights around the
world. Each contributor to the volume reviews change,
assesses consequences, and offers personal policy
prescriptions in each of these areas. The book also
re-thinks the nature of 21st century diplomacy,
examining the ways in which power is not only being
re-distributed but used in new and different ways. It
examines the concept of power itself, the new roles
being played by NGOs and by technology, and asks how the
complex range of actors on the world stage today can be
encouraged to work together to deliver the peaceful and
prosperous future we seek. It also examines how the UK
fits into this picture and reviews the strengths and
sources of influence the UK can still bring to
bear.
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