Külügyi Szemle - A Teleki László Intézet Külpolitikai Tanulmányok Központja folyóirata - 2002 (1. évfolyam)
2002 / 1. szám - RÉSUMÉ - Kiss J. László: The "End of History?", or the New Model of Foreign and Security Policies - Rostoványi Zsolt: Civilizations against a Civilization? The Antinomies of the Post-Cold War International Order
Resume László Kiss ).: The "End of History?", or the New Model of Foreign and Security Policies After the ending of the East-West conflict and specifically after the terrorist actions on September 11,2001, it became clear that we live in one "global space". There is no "other side": terrorism is also a part of the global civilization. Globalization means the termination of the incongruence of economic, financial, ecological, etc. spaces with political ones and thus it means the emergence of the problems of "governance without government" (Rosenau, Czempiel) and "governance beyond the nation-state" (Zürn). On the other hand, I also means the disappearance of the rigid borderline between foreign and domestic policy in the developed nations. The global integration of the "world of societies", that is, of the non-state social and economic actors (TNCs, IGOs, NGOs) also appear. However, globalization does not mean the "end of politics", it only means that politics has been transferred from within the framework of states into the supraterritorial space. This development necessarily brings about a number of modifications in the traditional "rational actor" model of the realist theory of international relations. These are as follows: the agenda of international politics include several items which have previously belonged to domestic politics; the societal determination of foreign policy has increased; the horizontal structures of the information revolution (public diplomacy, e-diplomacy) strengthens the changes in the nature of foreign policy; the role of the states remains important despite the enhancement of the social resources of foreign policy; the security policy model has undergone significant changes since the ending of the Cold war; and the institutions of foreign policy have also changed - the question is how the foreign policies of the individual ministries can be integrated into a unified foreign policy. Zsolt Rostoványi: Civilizations against a Civilization? The Antinomies of the Post-Cold War International Order The 21st century is going to be the century of civilization(s) and culture(s). The analysis of globalization can only reveal the real processes and state of the simultaneously integrating and disintegrating, globalizing and localizing, unifying and fragmenting world parallelly with the civilization-cultural analysis. The author examines the antinomies of the 2002. tavasz 227