Liberal World Order and Global Security Governance: Analyzing Its Impact On the Global South Through a Case Study of Afghanistan

Authors

  • Muhammad Saeed

Abstract

This article attempts to understand the nature of global security governance in the
context of relations between the West and the global South under liberal world order.
To do this, it asks a simple question: what the global security governance seeks to
secure and from whom and what to secure? Focusing on these question, this study
engages critically with theory and practice of liberal internationalism. This critique is
informed by insights from critical theory of Rober W. Cox, post-structural theory of
Markus Kienscherf and postcolonial theory of Alexander D. Barder. This study is
mainly qualitative and analytical. Besides secondary sources such as books, research
reports and articles etc., primary sources such as declassified documents of United
States government available online, as well as various reports by international
organizations, and, interviews from Afghan students studying in Pakistani universities,
have been used for this study. Using US-led twenty-year war in Afghanistan, this article
shows that in global security governance, under liberal world order, races and
civilizations of global South are considered as existential threats to the West which are
dealt with policies that contradict rules of liberal world order claimants.

Additional Files

Published

2024-01-01

How to Cite

Muhammad Saeed. (2024). Liberal World Order and Global Security Governance: Analyzing Its Impact On the Global South Through a Case Study of Afghanistan. ASIAN Journal of International Peace & Security (AJIPS), 7(4), 14 - 26. Retrieved from http://ajips.fairlips.org/index.php/ajips/article/view/2023-vol-07-issue-4-liberal-world-order-and-global-security-gove