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With today’s social and geopolitical order in significant flux
this project offers vital insight into the future global order by
comparatively charting national media perceptions regarding the
future of global competition, through the lens of Ontological
Security (OS). The authors employ a mixed-method approach to
analyze 620 news articles from 47 Russian, Chinese, Venezuelan, and
Iranian news sources over a five-year period (2014-2019),
quantitatively comparing the drivers of their visions while
providing in-depth qualitative case studies for each nation. Not
only do these narratives reveal how these four nations understand
the current global order, but also point to their (in)flexibility
and agentic capacity for reflection in adapting, even shaping the
future order, and their identity-roles within it, around an
economic and diplomatic battleground. The authors argue these
narratives create trajectories with inertial effects grounded in
their OS needs, providing enduring insights into their behavior and
interests moving into the future. The Future of Global Coopetition
will help readers understand how influential nations typical
aligned in opposition to the US, envision the drivers of global
competition and the make-up of the future international system.
Those engaged in the study of media, global politics, international
relations, and communication will find this book to be a critical
source.
With today's social and geopolitical order in significant flux this
project offers vital insight into the future global order by
comparatively charting national media perceptions regarding the
future of global competition, through the lens of Ontological
Security (OS). The authors employ a mixed-method approach to
analyze 620 news articles from 47 Russian, Chinese, Venezuelan, and
Iranian news sources over a five-year period (2014-2019),
quantitatively comparing the drivers of their visions while
providing in-depth qualitative case studies for each nation. Not
only do these narratives reveal how these four nations understand
the current global order, but also point to their (in)flexibility
and agentic capacity for reflection in adapting, even shaping the
future order, and their identity-roles within it, around an
economic and diplomatic battleground. The authors argue these
narratives create trajectories with inertial effects grounded in
their OS needs, providing enduring insights into their behavior and
interests moving into the future. The Future of Global Coopetition
will help readers understand how influential nations typical
aligned in opposition to the US, envision the drivers of global
competition and the make-up of the future international system.
Those engaged in the study of media, global politics, international
relations, and communication will find this book to be a critical
source.
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