A typology of protest strategies to the liberal international order with a focus on the institutional order

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Author

Institute for Humanities and Cultural Studies

10.30465/cps.2024.37194.3388

Abstract

The 1990s saw the transition from a multilateral order to a liberal unilateral order. The characteristics of this order, following its growing unilateralism, led to the problems of legitimizing this order, which resulted in a different wave of protest strategies from international actors. The purpose of this article is to identify the new developments of the international order and typology of protest strategies. For the typology of strategies, it is focused on the behavior of governments in the face of international liberal institutions as an indicator of neoliberal order. For this purpose, the case study of the two institutions of the United Nations Security Council and the International Criminal Court and various strategies towards these two liberal institutions are the focus of the article.

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