The concept of Third Emancipation as a geopolitical idea of liberation for Peru and the Ibero-American region
Text presented on the occasion of the First Latin American and Caribbean Conference on Multipolarity
Text presented on the occasion of the First Latin American and Caribbean Conference on Multipolarity
After the collapse of the USSR, at the turn of the XX century and until the first decade of the XXI century, the Anglo-Saxon world order unequivocally maintained the unipolar hegemony of Euro-Atlanticism on a global scale. Possessed by a Luciferian impulse, the Euro-Atlanticist countries tried with all their might to halt the process of historical development, chanting victory and promoting the "end of history" (as F.Fukuyama put it), promoting and imposing a world controlled by blood and fire on the basis of liberal economic (neoliberalism), cultural (postmodernism) and axiological ethics (individualism); nevertheless, this brief and intense period of unipolar world hegemony has begun to show obvious signs of weakening.
For much of academic and liberal opinion, populism is a term as vague as derogatory.
There was attempts in Peru to impeach the current president, Pedro Kuczynski, for a corruption scandal. These attempts have as of yet not succeeded: after long discussions (in the order of 14 hours) only 78 deputies out of the necessary 87 voted in favour of removing him from his post. However, the numbers alone speak of a sad future for the president.
The preceding two parts of the research examined the most geostrategically significant events and trends in South American history, thus preparing the reader for better understanding the present-day geopolitical situation in the continent.
During the ministerial summit of APEC held in Peru, talks between US Secretary of State John Kerry and Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov . They were discussing a very wide range of issues, including the situation in Syria, Ukraine, Yemen and the US.