Global order shifts from Western universalism to pluriversality amid decolonial turn. Collapse of Washington Consensus, rise of multipolarity, and security-focused fragmentation demand decolonizing consensus itself—not imposing a single framework but enabling multiple coexisting knowledge systems.
Global order is moving away from Western universalism toward a fragmented, multipolar world. Decolonial thought questions the idea of a single consensus, emphasizing pluriversality and coexisting knowledge systems. Emerging futures favor plural, negotiated global orders beyond imposed unity.
Although no one agrees on where the world is heading, there is growing recognition that we are experiencing a profound transformation. The question is no longer whether the global order is changing, but how—and more importantly, whether a new decolonial consensus can emerge in an increasingly fragmented world. If the very idea of a single universal consensus has been challenged by decolonial thought, can we still speak of global agreement? Or should we instead ask whether we need a localized framework, or a decolonization of consensus itself?
Decolonial scholarship has long rejected the notion of a singular, universal framework organizing the world. Concepts such as pluriversality emphasize the coexistence of multiple traditions, cultures, epistemologies and lifeworlds. Paradoxically, however, global politics continue to be shaped by ideas that claim universality—whether expressed through the language of “civilization” from the 19th century to contemporary discourses on “democracy”, “free markets”, “human rights” or “collective security”, which have historically served to legitimize the interventionist policies of Western states.
This tension traces its roots to the 15th century, when European maritime expansion began. Early modern globalization was not immediately characterized by total domination; as the historical literature suggests, European expansionist policies initially operated as an “empire of the weak”. From the late 15th century onward, European powers established footholds in the Americas, parts of East Asia, and coastal Africa, deliberately avoiding direct confrontations with the formidable land-based powers of the era—the Ottomans, Safavids, Russians and the Chinese of the Ming and Qing dynasties.
By the late 18th and specifically the 19th century, however, this dynamic underwent a seismic shift. The West established an advanced power mechanism in political economy along with a global epistemic monopoly to justify its colonial subjugation of the rest of the world. We witnessed the rise of purportedly universal colonial approaches in knowledge production, institutionalized under the banner of modern science and philosophy.
This can be seen in Anthropology from a Pragmatic Point of View by Immanuel Kant, in which he analyzes “national characters” across the planet, thereby reducing ancient civilizations to “nations” from a Western perspective. This implies that because the rest of the world lacked European-style nation-states, they had not yet reached the necessary civilizational level of development.
Similarly, G.W.F. Hegel drew a clear division between ‘civilized’ Western nations and the rest of the world, criticizing the architecture, theology and art of non-Western peoples. Based on a progressive, teleological perspective of history, Hegel asserted that the rest of the world was obligated to follow the West. This Eurocentric taxonomy was further reinforced by Charles Darwin’s biological classifications, which directly influenced 19th-century social science to create racial and cultural hierarchies.
Under this framework, to be deemed ‘civilized’ necessitated adopting the specific concepts of civil and political society embedded within the European nation-state.
The Berlin Conference (1884–85) formalized the “Scramble for Africa” as European powers—along with the United States—agreed on rules to divide and control the continent, marking a shift from coastal trade relations with African societies to direct territorial colonization. Driven by intense competition, economic interests and the ambitions of figures like King Leopold II of Belgium, European states rapidly expanded inland, completely disregarding indigenous authority and violently redrawing Africa’s political map. This process intensified geopolitical rivalries within Europe while laying the foundations for long-term colonial exploitation and structural inequality across the African continent.
The logical conclusion of these colonial partition clashes and competition over these lands arrived with World War I. The collapse of empires laid bare the cynical nature of this epistemic order.
The Bolshevik publication of the secret Sykes-Picot Agreement (1916) revealed the clandestine plans of the British, French and Russian empires to carve up the Ottoman Empire, as other documents exposed the partition of the Qajar Dynasty between the British and Russian empires.
Following the war, the League of Nations was established on the basis of Western principles. Yet, it merely codified old imperial hierarchies, continuing to classify most of the non-Western societies as ‘nations’ requiring the supervision of ‘civilized nations’ under the mandate regime of the League, ostensibly to prepare them for Western-style state and national models.
During the Cold War, global consensus was structured around a bipolar ideological struggle between Western liberalism and Soviet communism. However, movements such as the Bandung Conference (1955) and the Non-Aligned Movement represented a completely different aspiration: not merely to stand neutrally between two rival blocs, but to imagine a world beyond colonial hierarchies. Bandung was not just a geopolitical event; it was an epistemic rupture—an attempt to reframe the global order from the perspective of the colonized.
Notwithstanding, as anti-colonial movements achieved formal independence, this alternative vision lost its momentum. The utopian energy of decolonization faded as the structural conditions of economic and cultural dependency remained largely intact. Decolonization, it became clear, was not simply about acquiring sovereignty; it required a deeper, more systemic transformation of knowledge, institutions and global hierarchies.
The Rise and Fall of the Washington Consensus Era
The post-Cold War era replaced ideological bipolarity with a new orthodoxy: the Washington Consensus, rooted in market liberalization, privatization and deregulation. For a time, it was heralded as the final, universal model of development. Yet its failures—rising inequality, recurring financial crises and profound social dislocation—quickly exposed its structural and moral limits.
This exhaustion has been explicitly acknowledged by its original architects. For instance, in his February 2026 speech at the Munich Security Conference, US Secretary of State Marco Rubio signaled a significant shift: he stated that the United States would no longer follow these past dogmatic trade policies, which he argued had allowed rival powers to exploit the system while eroding the West’s civilizational and Christian heritage. Instead, he argued that this identity must be restored, asserting that policies would be pursued to ensure the continuity of American supremacy, regardless of the costs.
Evaluating the State-Led Beijing Consensus Model
Ironically, one of the greatest beneficiaries of the original economic architecture was China. By selectively integrating into the global economy while retaining state sovereignty, Beijing challenged Western economic prescriptions. This gave rise to discussions of a Beijing Consensus, characterized by state-led development, infrastructure investment and pragmatic experimentation.
However, this model also reveals significant vulnerabilities: highly centralized decision-making carries the risk of total failure, as evidenced by long-term demographic imbalances originating from the one-child policy or over-centralized economic planning. Interestingly, even Francis Fukuyama, who famously conceptualized the post-Cold War era under the American hegemony of market liberalism, has appreciated the significance and success of the Beijing model, noting in a recent interview that many developing nations are increasingly likely to emulate it.
Today, even the architects of the liberal order have begun to distance themselves from its original tenets. Internal critiques from within the Western policy establishment signal that traditional metrics no longer command universal legitimacy.
A similar exhaustion is visible in Europe. The long-celebrated “European Dream”—as articulated by thinkers like Jeremy Rifkin, who envisioned a post-national arena of peace, sustainability and human rights—now appears increasingly fragile. What was once offered as a normative model for regional unity is currently struggling with severe internal fragmentation, populist backlashes and a precipitous decline in global influence. Furthermore, Europe remains heavily dependent on American military protection, failing to project strategic autonomy and staying largely subordinated to American strategic policies in the wake of the war in Ukraine.
In response to these crises, new attempts to rethink global coordination are emerging. The “London Consensus”, initiated by institutions such as the London School of Economics (LSE), reflects a shift toward economic and social resilience designed to regulate the current capitalist system. But even these alternative frameworks remain embedded within the very global capitalist structures they seek to reform.
Beyond Western models, regional perspectives are asserting a significant place in discussions of global consensus. As Kishore Mahbubani and Amitav Acharya argue regarding the Asian Century, the irreversible shift of power from the West to the East is not a historical anomaly but a restoration. The rise of Asia forces the West to abandon its historical hubris and accept a multipolar reality where its own consensus is merely one voice among many.
Weaponized Civilizations and Aggressive Strategic Competition
As economic models falter, raw geopolitics have returned to the center of global affairs, changing the baseline expectations for a sustainable decolonial consensus. While discussions on global civilization could ideally be built upon pluriversal, mutual respect, the most influential legacy in recent decades remains Samuel P. Huntington’s Clash of Civilizations thesis. Diverse counter-narratives have emerged historically: Mohammad Khatami’s proposal of a “Dialogue among Civilizations” in late-1990s Iran; the subsequent “Alliance of Civilizations” co-sponsored by Turkey and Spain; and today, China’s “Global Civilization Initiative” (GCI).
However, we are also witnessing the weaponization of civilizational discourse. Whether through the emphasis on the “Judeo-Christian tradition” in the United States by Niall Ferguson, or Russia’s alignment of religious-geopolitical state ideology with Orthodox Christian narratives by Alexander Dugin, the ‘civilization’ discourse oscillates between seeking common ground and stoking confrontation. Ultimately, this discursive shift echoes 19th-century colonial binaries that labeled anything outside the Western sphere as ‘barbaric’, creating intellectual justifications for contemporary conflicts and fierce strategic competition.
Looking at current warfare, the war in Ukraine has accelerated a profound global shift toward security-oriented policymaking. Defense spending is soaring, alliances are hardening into zero-sum blocs, and industrial friction is intensifying. One might even speak of an emerging ‘Security Consensus’—partly inspired by Washington and Moscow’s holistic approach to conflict, which encompasses not only traditional warfare but the securitization of technology, energy, nuclear capabilities and strategic diplomatic alignments. We are witnessing a world where militarism, territorial sovereignty and hard power once again dominate international relations.
At the same time, other regions reflect more destructive dynamics. In the Middle East, ongoing conflicts, displacement and asymmetrical warfare point toward processes that can only be described as recolonization consensus. Here, external interventions, internal fragmentation and violent power imbalances reproduce older colonial hierarchies in new forms. This pattern of ordering operates through Israelization, particularly the continuation of Israeli settler colonial policies in the Palestinian territories. This functions not as a formal diplomatic doctrine, but as a mode of hierarchical domination that prioritizes military containment over international law.
At this juncture, if we are to evaluate international law and the international system, the genocide charges brought against the Israeli regime within international judicial mechanisms have exposed the severe limitations of global governance. The UN multilateral system is being profoundly questioned for its inability to halt ongoing systemic violations. Nonetheless, many nations continue to favor diplomatic engagement, and significant critiques have emerged—such as Turkey’s persistent calls to reform the UN Security Council against its hijacking by its five permanent members (encapsulated in the slogan ‘The world is bigger than five.’). This keeps the urgent question alive: can an efficiently restructured multilateral system provide the basis for a more legitimate global consensus?
Conclusion: Decolonial Consensus or Decolonizing Consensus?
What emerges from this fragmented landscape is not a single, coherent global order, but a multiplicity of competing economic, political, and security frameworks. Each claims universal validity, yet none can achieve it.
The deeper question, then, is whether seeking a new global agreement is itself a misguided endeavor. Decolonial thought suggests that the problem is not the absence of consensus, but the persistent, Eurocentric assumption that there should be one. A truly pluriversal world does not require a singular, unified framework imposed from above. In this sense, the urgent task before us is not to build an architectural alternative to replace older models, but to pursue the decolonization of consensus itself.
Perhaps we are living in a more opportune time than ever to advance this shift. The West no longer stands as an absolute global exemplar, as it grapples with severe internal crises it cannot resolve within its own borders. Concurrently, global production systems have undergone a profound evolution. The post-Fordist era has dismantled the monolithic mass identities constructed during the Industrial Revolution, giving rise to plural, decentralized structures that are being debated not only globally but within individual nation-states, highlighting the urgent need for new alternatives.
This critical turn was deeply explored in the Decolonial Voices series of the World Decolonization Forum, which hosts prominent scholars including Walter Mignolo, Farish Noor, Syed Farid Alatas, Joseph Massad and Fernanda Beigel. While profound skepticism toward a single universal path consistently emerged from these dialogues, scholars such as Souleymane Bachir Diagne, Ebrahim Moosa and Farish Noor also pointed toward areas of meaningful global convergence. Notably, Diagne’s emphasis on revising the multilateral system to foster a more peaceful world highlights that decolonization is equally necessary for the West’s own philosophical and conceptual framework.
Ultimately, this requires a fundamental shift away from enforcing global uniformity and toward enabling true pluriversality—a world capable of negotiating difference without resorting to erasure or domination.

