
Manjeet S. Pardesi
@manjeetsp
World Orders and World/Global History, Great Powers, Asia, China-India; Usual caveats; New Book: Divergent Worlds (Yale University Press, 2025)
ID: 99574641
https://people.wgtn.ac.nz/manjeet.pardesi 26-12-2009 21:04:26
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How can Asia’s histories reshape our theories of world politics? Join the next GRADNAS Seminar on 8 May, 8.30am AEST ➡️ ow.ly/EmEZ50VFUHK Tommy Chai Dr Frieder Dengler Kayeon Roh Manjeet S. Pardesi





Hi everyone! Do join us tomorrow morning (AU/NZ time) for our upcoming GRADNAS seminar to hear three emerging scholars on the historical International Relations of Asia: Tommy Chai, Frieder Dengler, and Kayeon Roh! Looking forward to hearing about their exciting work!

At this seminar presentation on the basis of our newly released book at the Vienna Diplomatic Academy where co-editor Markus Kornprobst and I discuss the many dimensions of the current and emerging world order and their implications for the regions. Georgetown University Press Diplomatische Akademie Wien

My copy is here! Amitav Acharya & I argue that the US-led liberal order is giving way to a multiplex, multiregional world order! The active agency of Southeast Asian states is shaping such an order in the Indo-Pacific! Thanks T.V. Paul & Markus Kornprobst press.georgetown.edu/Book/The-New-C…


Auckland contacts: you'll enjoy this discussion! Manjeet S. Pardesi has done some great analysis on our emerging multi-polar order & what it might look like in practice. Ie not a world dominated by mjr powers like the US and China, but a world where regions and countries wield influence


In “The Once and Future World Order, ” by Amitav Acharya, and “The Golden Road,” by William Dalrymple, our best hope might be that history repeats itself.

Must read! Evelyn Goh: The master binary—that there is a status quo international order (upheld by the ‘good guys’) facing off revisionist challengers (the ‘bad guys’) who want to replace it with something else was a dubious simplification to begin with. It is now patently dead

Colonial extraction and unequal exchange have shaped two centuries of North-South inequality. 🧵A thread on a NEW STUDY written with Gastón Nievas Offidani [1/9] 🔗 wid.world/news-article/u…
