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Only 25 years after the end of the Cold War, the Western-dominated
global order is fading and our hopes that liberal democracy would
spread and bring world peace are evaporating. While the West is
increasingly preoccupied with its internal problems, threats to
global peace have fundamentally changed: wars among nation-states
and their alliances, once the dominant scourge of humankind, have
almost disappeared and are replaced by a triple threat from
intra-state armed conflicts, the failing of nation-states and the
rise of belligerent non-state actors. The global peace we felt
within our reach in 1991, is escaping us. On Building Peace seeks
the answers that the UN Charter can no longer provide. Once meant
as a guarantor for peace, the Charter was never designed to deal
with intra-state conflicts and today its core principles are
eroded. The book makes two rather simple, but possibly unpopular
suggestions for preserving future peace: first, we must rescue the
nation-state, not despite but because of globalization, and second,
we must not further undermine the United Nations, but expand its
Charter for dealing collectively with this triple threat. The
struggle for survival in a world of limited resources and
environmental degradation will deepen intra-state conflicts. We
must prevent slipping back into a new round of Cold War-type
confrontations and focus on finding collective solutions for
building peace. For the sake of billions of people of future
generations, we cannot get this wrong.
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