Southeast Asia in a Multipolar World Eastern Economic Forum ()
In today’s world, where globalization and integration are becoming increasingly significant factors in the development of society, special attention is paid to regions that play a key role in the formation of the new world order. The Asia-Pacific has become a new centre of politics and economics, playing a key role in the modern geopolitical system. And no one can deny that the centre of global development has shifted to this region. Southeast Asia is a critical region for global politics, where complex political processes are unfolding, including territorial disputes and changing balances of power between various countries. How does the changing balance of power in the Asia-Pacific affect the global geopolitical situation? What external forces influence political processes in the Asia-Pacfic? How might the process of decoupling that is taking place between the United States and China change global political and economic relations? What are NATO’s interests in the Asia-Pacific in the context of the U.S.–China rivalry? Could Southeast Asia become the new global financial centre?
Moderator:
Alexander Dugin — Chairman of the Organizing Committee, Multipolarity Forum; Director, Ivan Ilyin Higher Political School
Speakers:
Connie Rahakundini Bakrie — Professor, Faculty of International Relations, St. Petersburg State University
Zhang Weiwei — Professor, Fudan University; Director of the Chinese Institute
Maria Zakharova — Director, Department of Information and the Press, Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Russian Federation
Vinay Kumar — Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the Republic of India to the Russian Federation
Konstantin Malofeev — Head, Tsargrad
Nkosi Zwelivelile Mandela — Chairman, International Russophile Movement; Member of Parliament, Chairman of Portfolio Committee on Agriculture, Land Reform and Rural Development, National Assembly of South Africa
Pepe Escobar — Geopolitician, Journalist, Specialist in Global Economics and International Relations