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With the waning of globalization, post-Cold War world is becoming a site of sovereign nationalism. Elucidate.

Thomas Friedman, (The Lexus and the Olive Tree), defines globalization as the inexorable integration of markets, nation-states, and technologies, making it farther, faster, deeper, and cheaper. However, at present, the world is witnessing ‘Deglobalisation’.

Waning of Globalization

Global trade as % of GDP peaked at 61% in 2008, declining to ~52% by 2024 (World Bank).

Reversal of Liberalization- Trade wars, tariffs (US-China), and reshoring policies mark a retreat from free markets.

The splinternet, 5G bans, and AI regulation indicate the politicisation of technology.

Weakening of Global Institutions- paralysis of WTO, and unilateral sanctions. Eg- USA’s CAATSA

Regionalism replacing globalization – RCEP, IPEF, BRICS+, EU strategic autonomy.

Rise of Sovereign Nationalism

Economic Nationalism – US “America First”, India’s Atmanirbhar Bharat, EU’s strategic autonomy.

Resource Nationalism- Nations asserting control over rare earths, energy, and food exports. Eg- Indonesia’s nickel ban.

Political Sovereignty – Brexit (2016) justified as “taking back control”.

Identity Politics- Nationalist rhetoric linked to cultural, ethnic, or religious identity. Eg- rise of Neo Fascist powers in Europe.

Strategic Assertion – Russia’s rejection of Western dominance through the Ukraine war.

Digital Sovereignty – EU’s GDPR and DSA for data protection; China’s Great Firewall.

Security Nationalism – Eg- Iran’s nuclear program

Vaccine & Resource Nationalism during COVID-19

Backlash Against Migration- Eg- Immigration controls in UK, EU, USA

Public Opinion Shift- Global surveys (Pew, 2023) show declining trust in globalization and preference for domestic self-reliance.

The retreat of globalization signals a transition from hyper-interdependence to guarded sovereignty and realist state-centric politics