GLTR Chapter Five Major Contemporary Global Issues
GLTR Chapter Five Major Contemporary Global Issues
GLTR Chapter Five Major Contemporary Global Issues
• Important dynamics of the 21st century is the shift in focus from International
Relation global relations and Issues. The world today is distinctively different
mainly because of the end of the Cold War (the post-Cold War period).
• The distinctiveness of the post-Cold War period rests upon the transformation of
the agenda of the world politics (predominance of new issues). No longer is world
politics dominated by issues arising from East–West relations – the threat of
nuclear war, the ideological struggle between liberal democracy and Marxism–
Leninism, crisis diplomacy, and so on.
• The international community is now preoccupied with other issues such as the
search for a ‘New World Order’, the impact of terrorism, the disparities in wealth
between developed and developing countries, environmental issues and so on.
• The answer to this question is found in addressing the following four interlinked
questions. These are:
• i) what is the extent or scope of an issue? Does it affect large parts of the global
arena or it is confined and contained to a narrow scope? For example, this is the
kind of question often asked about civil wars and other limited conflicts. How far
are they likely to spill over into the broader arena, and thus become of concern to
a wide variety of actors?
• ii) what is the urgency or intensity of the issue? For instance, on the issue of
global environmental change, it is quite clear that such an issue has different
levels of urgency for different political actors, who will as a result give it different
degrees of priority, attention and resources
What makes an issue a global issue?
• iii) what is the salience or visibility of a given issue? This question relates to the
roles of the media or other actors who confer urgency or intensity, and
• iv) What is the centrality or location of an issue? This is partly an objective issue
of geography, implying that the closer the issue is to important actors the greater
the attention and significance it will acquire.
• These are the criteria the cluster of four major contemporary global issues
discussed in this chapter are selected
5.1.1. Global Security Issues
• In the security arena, there are two main issues and challenges facing the emerging new
world order. These are: terrorism and nuclear proliferation.
I. Global Terrorism
• Terrorism an be defined as a global security problem characterized by the use of violence in
the form of hostage taking, bombing, hijacking and other indiscriminate attacks on civilian
targets.
• In the world there are four different types of terrorist organizations namely: left wing
terrorists, right wing terrorists, ethno-nationalists/separatist terrorists and religious
terrorists.
• Global communication and transport physical technologies helped the terrorists develop
capacity to conduct attacks across the globe. However, terrorists have not yet acquired and
used radiological, biological or chemical weapons so far.
Factors Conducive to Terrorism
The most widely perceived courses or conducive factors for terrorism are:
• Socio-economic cause (poverty in the sense of economic and political isolation,
feelings of hopelessness, violations of human rights, and the lack of democracy
provides a fertile breeding ground for terrorism);
• Political cause (legitimate grievances and the failure of governments to
adequately address these problems often foment terrorism.
• Lack of democracy, and widespread and systematic violations of human rights
contributes to the rise of terrorism)
• psychological cause (humiliation is another factor conducive to the use of
terrorism).
Types of Terrorism
Although the types of terrorism tend to overlap, commonly observed types of terrorism
are
• Domestic terrorism: occurs within the borders of a particular country and is associated
with extremist groups.
• Nationalist terrorism: is closely associated with struggles for political autonomy and
independence.
• Religious terrorism: grows out of extreme fundamentalist religious groups that believe
that God is on their side and that their violence is divinely inspired and approved.
• State terrorism: is a cold, calculated, efficient, and extremely destructive form of
terrorism, partly because of the overwhelming power at the disposal of governments.
• Global terrorism: is partly an outgrowth of the forces of globalization, which enable
the different kinds of terrorism to spread worldwide.
II. Nuclear Weapons and their Proliferations
• Fear of nuclear war dominated security planning during the cold war, and enhanced security
was sought through arms control agreement (Treaty of Non-Proliferation of nuecler weapon)
between the two super powers. The end of the cold war has led to a decrease in concern
about the dangers of nuclear war between the super powers.
• In the post-cold war period there is greater concern about nuclear proliferation – that is, the
spread of nuclear weapons themselves and the technology and knowledge required to build
them.
Events that increased fears about horizontal nuclear proliferation
• First, in the aftermath of the 1991 gulf war, UN Weapons Inspection Teams
discovered alarming evidence of the extent of the Iraqi nuclear program. This led to the
recognition that existing non-proliferation strategies had failed
• Second, the demise of the Soviet Union and emergence of new states which retain sectors of
the Soviet military industrial complex and which face severe economic problems, led to
increased fears that their nuclear technologies and scientific knowledge will be sold off to
the highest bidder
• Third, a nuclear arms race began in South Asia after nuclear tests by India and
Pakistan in May 1998.Fears are heightened because the two states have a history
of hostility and are engaged in a protracted conflict over Kashmir. Furthermore,
both states have missiles capable of carrying nuclear weapons within range of
each other’s capital cities.
• Fourth, in 2003 the International Atomic energy agency (IAEA) uncovered an illicit
supply network in an investigation triggered by US-led concerns that Iran had an
illicit nuclear weapons program. This has then further strengthened the concern
of the international community about the possibility of increased trend of
weapons proliferation in the world.
Reasons for the Proliferation of Weapons
There are strategic, economic, and political motivations for weapons proliferation.
These include:
• Super-power Rivalry during the Cold War: Geopolitical considerations influenced
the United States and the Soviet Union to transfer weapons to their respective
allies. For example, both the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) and the
Warsaw Pact justified the proliferation of weapons in terms of collective self-
defense.
• Military Burden Sharing: Reluctant to engage in direct military confrontation,
both superpowers provided weapons, technical assistance, and arms production
technologies to their allies so that they could defend themselves. An example of
this was the Nixon Doctrine, which supported weapons transfers to Japan, South
Korea, Taiwan, and other Asian countries.
• Regional Balance of Power: Arms sales are often defended on the grounds that
such transfers contribute to regional stability and diminish the likelihood of war.
• Political, Military, and Economic Influence: Given the dependence of the United
States on petroleum supplies from the Middle East in general and Saudi Arabia in
particular, arms transfers are instrumental not only in bolstering these countries’
security but also in enabling the United States to gain and maintain access to
these countries’ political, military, and economic elites.
• Economies of Scale: Many countries export weapons to obtain resources to
finance the development and production of more advanced weapons.
• Self-Reliance: Many countries develop their own weapons to preserve or enhance
their independence.
• Economic Factors: Much of the global weapons trade is motivated by financial
considerations.
• Ethnic Conflicts: Ethnic conflicts generate demand for weapons transfers.
• Authoritarian Regimes: Governments that rule without the consent of the people
generally rely on military force to exercise control.
5.1.2. Global Environmental Issues
• Climate change poses numerous and harsh challenges for sustainable development
and its effects are be felt in all regions of the globe. But degree of vulnerability varies,
particularly with developing countries and the poor which have contributed the least
to global warming but are suffering the most.
• The 18 session of the Conference of the Parties to the UN Framework Convention on
Climate Change held in Doha in November and December 2012 also illustrated, global
climate change mitigation efforts are insufficient.
• In Doha, countries agreed and launched the second commitment period for the Kyoto
Protocol that was commenced from 1 January 2013 and will end on 31 December
2020. However, several countries that had ratified the Kyoto Protocol for its first
commitment period withdrew from it and decided not to join the second commitment
period.
• The Kyoto Protocol obligations states to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.
• The greenhouse gas reduction goals set out in the Kyoto Protocol remain largely
unachieved. Most of the developed countries have failed to achieve their
reduction targets.
• Countries that apparently have achieved their targets have often done so mainly
through off shoring greenhouse gas-intensive production operations to
developing countries.
• Meanwhile, since production technologies in developing countries are generally
more green-house gas-intensive, off shoring has led to an increase rather than a
decrease in the total (global) volume of emissions, thus frustrating the very
purpose of the Protocol.
5.1.3. Global Socio-economic Issues
• Global Inequality and Poverty - Does Inequality matter?
• The existence of inequality is not automatically major problem, especially when the
economy is growing and there are many opportunities for upward mobility. As long as
the standard of living is improving for those on the bottom of the economic ladder,
concerns about inequality tend to diminish.
• The last two decades of the 20th century and the 1st decade of this century were
characterized by a widening gap between rich and poor.
• For example, in USA the financial and economic crisis increased inequality and
heightened awareness of the concentration of wealth held by the top 1%t of
Americans. That awareness led to “We are the 99 percent,” a battle cry of the “Occupy
Wall Street” protests against financial inequality that began in New York City and
spread around the world.
• Persistent inequality and enduring poverty challenge beliefs in the equality of
opportunity and the possibility of upward mobility, which led to challenging the
legitimacy of the economic system and political and social institutions at national and
international level.
Extreme inequality perpetuates poverty and the concentration of economic and
political power and reduces economic efficiency. It strengthens inequality-
perpetuating institutions in three ways:
• Inequality discourages the political participation of poor people, which, in turn,
diminishes their access to education, health care, and other services that contribute
to economic growth and development.
• Inequality often prevents the building and proper functioning of impartial
institutions and observance of the rule of law.
• Inequality enables the wealthy to refuse to compromise politically or economically,
which further weakens poor societies in a global society that requires relatively fast
responses to economic developments.
• These consequences of inequality combine to ensure that poor societies will remain
poor and unequal, trapping most of their inhabitants in a destructive cycle of
poverty.
• Growing inequality among as well as within nations has direct and indirect
implications for globalization. Inequality could undermine globalization by
influencing countries to adopt protectionist policies and disengage, to the extent
possible, from the global economy. But the ramifications extend beyond
economic issues to problems such as terrorism, the environment, and the
spread of infectious diseases.
Migration and refugee problems
• International migration and refugee (including asylum seekers and Internally
Displace Peoples)have become more prominent on the international agenda in
recent years both because of their increasing scale and growing impact on
international affairs. Several factors account for these developments:
• First, the number of states in the international system has steadily increased
since the end of the First World War. As the number of international boundaries
containing the new state has increased, so too has the volume of international
migrants and refugee.
• Second, rapid increase in the world’s population, and it continues to grow led to
over exploitation of regional resources, and catastrophic famine and population
movement.
• Third, the revolution in communications and transportation has made people
aware of conditions and opportunities in other parts of the world, as well as
making travel to those areas easier. Finally, the turmoil and uncertainty of the
turbulent and unstable world place an important role in motivating people to
search abroad for a better life.
• Until recently, migration and refugee were not seen as central political issues by
most governments in the world. It was only in the 1980s, as the effects of past
migrations and refugee crises begun to be felt both domestically and
internationally, and as their pressures on developed states increased, that the
issues rose to the top of the international political agenda
• Nowadays, migrants and refugees to most advanced countries are becoming the
target of animosity from right-wing groups ( e.g. Le Pen in France, Neo Nazis in
Germany and Austria and extreme-rightist in Britain) who blamed them for the
high level of unemployment and decline in general living standard.
• The inability of states to maintain complete control of entry to their territory, or
to prevent the formation of migrants and refugees with extra-territorial
connections and affiliations, is also pointing to an erosion of sovereignty.
• States are no longer able to exert control over their own destinies.
• The growth of non-indigenous ethnic minorities is helping to blur all distinctions
between domestic and international boundaries.
• Migration and refugee also highlight the importance of economic issues in
contemporary world politics, because of close association between economic
pressures and the motivations for and responses to migration and refugee. Thus
migration and refugee contributes to, illuminates and reinforces the
interdependent nature of world politics.
5.1.4. Global Cultural Issues
Cultural Imperialism
• Cultural imperialism is the result of cultural globalization- a process whereby
information, commodities and images that have been produced in one part of the
world enter into a global flow that tends to ‘flatten out’ cultural differences
between nations, regions and individuals. This has sometimes been portrayed as
a process of ‘McDonaldization’.
• McDonaldization is the process whereby global commodities and commercial and
marketing practices associated with the fast-food industry have come to
dominate more and more economic sectors.
• Cultural globalization is fuelled by the so-called information revolution, the
spread of satellite communication, telecommunications networks, information
technology and internet and global media corporations.
• The popular image of globalization is that it is a top- down process, the
establishment of a single global system that imprints itself on all parts of the
world. In this view, globalization is linked to homogenization as cultural diversity
are destroyed in a world in which we all watch the same television programmes,
buy the same commodities, eat the same food, support the same sports stars,etc.
• Globalization has in some ways fashioned more complex patterns of social and
cultural diversity in developing and developed states alike.
• In developing states western consumer goods and images have been absorbed
into more traditional cultural practices through a process of indigenization.
Indigenization is the process through which alien goods and practices are
absorbed by being adapted to local needs and circumstances.
Cultural (civilizational) clash and identity conflicts