By 2100, more than 80 per cent of the world's population is expected to live in Afrasia (Africa and Asia). This book draws lessons from history, provides a new cognitive map of the world, and discusses multiple challenges global citizens will face in the age of Afrasia, an emerging macro-region. The centre of gravity of the world is shifting. Whether the world can manage a soft landing into sustainable equilibrium depends on the nature of the dialogue people in Africa and Asia will organise. The author argues that a state of equilibrium between the two is achievable, provided issues related to…mehr
By 2100, more than 80 per cent of the world's population is expected to live in Afrasia (Africa and Asia). This book draws lessons from history, provides a new cognitive map of the world, and discusses multiple challenges global citizens will face in the age of Afrasia, an emerging macro-region. The centre of gravity of the world is shifting. Whether the world can manage a soft landing into sustainable equilibrium depends on the nature of the dialogue people in Africa and Asia will organise. The author argues that a state of equilibrium between the two is achievable, provided issues related to gender, employment, agriculture, human-nature relationships, and multicultural coexistence are simultaneously addressed. Can future Afrasia present itself as a community determined not to allow the return of predatory practice internally and externally? Will the fates of African and Asian peoples converge or diverge? How about the future relationships between Afrasia and the rest of the world? Exploring these questions using multiple disciplines, this book will be of interest to professional researchers and graduate students in IR and Afro-Asian relations, as well as Asian and African area studies, demography, geography, history, development economics, anthropology, language education, and religious studies. The Open Access version of this book, available at http://www.taylorfrancis.com, has been made available under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives 4.0 license.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Yoichi Mine is Professor at the Graduate School of Global Studies, Doshisha University, Japan, and Visiting Fellow at JICA Ogata Sadako Research Institute for Peace and Development. His research interests include human security, global history, and African studies. His English publications include several co-edited volumes: Migration and Agency: Afro-Asian Encounters (Palgrave), Preventing Violent Conflict in Africa: Inequalities, Perceptions and Institutions (Palgrave), Human Security Norms in East Asia (Palgrave), and Human Security and Cross-Border Cooperation in East Asia (Palgrave). He is among the founders of the Japan Association for Human Security Studies and the Japan Society for Afrasian Studies.
Inhaltsangabe
Introduction Part I: World Maps in 2100 Chapter 1: Population Change towards the 22nd Century Chapter 2: A Soft Landing into a Stationary State Chapter 3: New Economic Spheres and Migration in Afrasia Part II: The Last Shall Be First Chapter 4: Eurasian Connectivity Chapter 5: Frontiers on the Continent and the Ocean Chapter 6: Two Scenarios Part III The Age of Afrasia Chapter 7: The Genesis of Pan-Regionalism Chapter 8: Religions in Afrasia Chapter 9: Communication in the South Conclusion Imagining a Benign Community
Introduction Part I: World Maps in 2100 Chapter 1: Population Change towards the 22nd Century Chapter 2: A Soft Landing into a Stationary State Chapter 3: New Economic Spheres and Migration in Afrasia Part II: The Last Shall Be First Chapter 4: Eurasian Connectivity Chapter 5: Frontiers on the Continent and the Ocean Chapter 6: Two Scenarios Part III The Age of Afrasia Chapter 7: The Genesis of Pan-Regionalism Chapter 8: Religions in Afrasia Chapter 9: Communication in the South Conclusion Imagining a Benign Community
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