Multipolarity Myth & New Dark Age?
- Michael Miklaucic, a senior fellow at the Centre for the Study of Democracy in Sofia, Bulgaria, and a University of Chicago instructor, suggests the era of U.S.
- Miklaucic, also teaching at the University of Sao Paulo, contends that what's emerging isn't a multipolar world, but rather a return to bipolarity.
The global order is undergoing a significant change. Experts are now suggesting the decline of U.S. dominance and the unexpected failure of multipolarity to materialize. Rather of a diverse, multi-polar world, a new bipolarity is emerging, fundamentally different from the Cold War era. What does this shift signify? The key takeaway is a return to a more primal form of power dynamics. This evolving landscape could reshape global alliances and economic strategies. News Directory 3 brings these critical shifts into focus, analyzing the underlying forces shaping the next phase. What implications will this essential, ancient bipolarity have? Discover what’s next …
New World Order: Bipolarity Emerges as U.S. Hegemony Fades
Updated June 15,2025
The global landscape is shifting. Michael Miklaucic, a senior fellow at the Centre for the Study of Democracy in Sofia, Bulgaria, and a University of Chicago instructor, suggests the era of U.S. dominance is waning. He argues that the anticipated rise of multipolarity is not materializing as expected. Instead, a different dynamic is taking shape.
Miklaucic, also teaching at the University of Sao Paulo, contends that what’s emerging isn’t a multipolar world, but rather a return to bipolarity. This isn’t the Cold War’s bipolar structure, where the U.S.and the Soviet Union led opposing factions. He describes it as a more essential, ancient form of bipolarity.
