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World Builders: Technology and the New Geopolitics

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World politics has changed, claims Bruno Maçães. Geopolitics is no longer simply a contest to control territory: in this age of advanced technology, it has become a contest to create the territory. Great powers seek to build a world for other states to inhabit, while keeping the ability to change the rules or the state of the world when necessary. At a moment when the old concepts no longer work, this book aims to introduce a radically new theory of world politics and technology. Understood as 'world building', the most important events of our troubled times suddenly appear connected and their inner logic is revealed: technology wars between China and the United States, the pandemic, the wars in Ukraine and the Middle East, and the energy transition. To conclude, Maçães considers the more distant future, when the metaverse and artificial intelligence become the world, a world the great powers must struggle to build and control.

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  • Identifies the full implications of technology for global politics
  • Interprets the contemporary world through discussions of major global challenges including tech wars, the pandemic, Russia's invasion of Ukraine and climate change
  • An exciting and accessible writing style
Author: Macaes Bruno
Publisher: CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS
Pages: 274
ISBN: 9781009397384
Cover: Hardback
Edition Number: 1
Release Year: 2025

Prologue: World Building
Introduction: The New Geopolitics
1. 2018
2. 2020
3. 2022
4. 2024
To Conclude ....

Notes

Index

Bruno Macaes is currently a Senior Advisor at Flint Global in London, where he advises companies on international politics, and a Senior Fellow at Renmin University, Beijing and the Hudson Institute in Washington. He was the Portuguese Europe Minister from 2013-2015, and was decorated by Spain and Romania for his services to government. He received his doctorate in political science from Harvard University, and was a research fellow at the American Enterprise Institute in Washington and the Carnegie Institute in Brussels. He has written for the Financial Times, Politico, the Guardian and Foreign Affairs, and appears regularly on CNN, the BBC, Bloomberg, Al Jazeera and CCTV.

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