Liberal modernity and the classical realist critique of the (present) international order

Classical realists have criticized liberal modernity in the post-1945 international order for heightening an individual's sense of insecurity and powerlessness, while intensifying their identification with extreme nationalism and violence. This author argues that this challenge is ongoing and i...

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Veröffentlicht in:International affairs (London) 2022-03, Vol.98 (2), p.569-586
1. Verfasser: Karkour, Haro L
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Classical realists have criticized liberal modernity in the post-1945 international order for heightening an individual's sense of insecurity and powerlessness, while intensifying their identification with extreme nationalism and violence. This author argues that this challenge is ongoing and is contributing to the crisis of the present international order. Creating a more stable and peaceful order requires a break with its post-1945 roots. Abstract In their critique of liberal modernity, classical realists theorized its consequence for the heightened sense of insecurity and powerlessness of the individual on the one hand, and the individual's identification with extreme nationalism and violence on the other. This became the challenge posed by liberal modernity in the post-1945 international order. The article argues that the present international order is an extension of the post-1945 order that never resolved this challenge. While the ‘embedded’ form of liberalism that lasted until the early 1970s made social compromises that mitigated the socio-economic insecurities of the individual in liberal modernity, it did not resolve this challenge. The later advancement of neo-liberalism only further intensified it. The article thus critiques existing debates that downplay the challenge of liberal modernity in their analyses of the crisis of the present international order. It concludes that if the present international order is to be put on more stable and peaceful grounds, it requires a more radical break from its post-1945 and post-Bretton Woods past: a break that does not simply call for ‘leadership’ or ‘offshore balancing’ but addresses the psycho-social needs of the individual in liberal modernity.
ISSN:0020-5850
1468-2346
DOI:10.1093/ia/iiac006