Beyond the Nation-State: From Geopolitical Discourse to Civilizational Dialogues

Hardback: $80.00
ISBN-13: 9798880702671
Published: July 2026
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Additional Information

328 pages | 8 b&w illustrations, 1 diagram
  • About the Book
  • In an era marked by geopolitical fragmentation and global crises, how can we envision a more stable and inclusive planetary order? This pioneering volume calls for a radical rethinking of international relations—moving beyond the Westphalian state system to embrace a civilizational dialogue rooted in shared histories, values, and mutual concern.

    The collection brings together leading scholars to explore the idea of tianxia (all under heaven) as a conceptual and moral framework for reimagining global order. Drawing from East Asian traditions and others, contributors interrogate concepts like empire, liberalism, Confucianism, and cosmopolitanism to assess the possibilities of intercultural cooperation in a post-national future.

    At the heart of the book is a critical yet hopeful proposition: that civilizational dialogues—despite the exclusionary implications of such discourse—can help us imagine planetary futures beyond binaries like “the West and the Rest.” Instead of universalizing one worldview, the chapters advocate for “differing for one another,” a relational equity that acknowledges diversity and fosters solidarity through accommodation, empathy, and shared planetary concerns such as climate, pandemics, and global justice.

    With contributions spanning political theory and comparative philosophy to historical reflection and Confucian civic education, Beyond the Nation-State offers not only a critique of current global paradigms but also a constructive path forward.

  • About the Author(s)
    • Roger T. Ames, Editor

      Roger T. Ames is Humanities Chair Professor at Peking University, senior academic advisor of the Berggruen Research Center at Peking University, and professor emeritus of philosophy at the University of Hawai‘i.
    • Jae Young Lee, Editor

      Jae Young Lee is Tianxia Project Consultant at the Berggruen Research Center at Peking University.
    • Roger T. Ames, Series Editor

      Roger T. Ames is Humanities Chair Professor at Peking University, senior academic advisor of the Berggruen Research Center at Peking University, and professor emeritus of philosophy at the University of Hawai‘i.
    • Peter D. Hershock, Series Editor

      Peter D. Hershock is director of the Asian Studies Development Program at the East-West Center, Honolulu.

    Contributors

    • Roger T. Ames
    • Hong Cheng
    • Inho Choi
    • Emmanuel Desfourneaux
    • Krishan Kumar
    • Yong Li
    • Lorenzo Marsili
    • Martin Powers
    • Jana Rošker
    • Sor-hoon Tan
    • Dingxin Zhao
    • Yiqun Zhou