Julia Gurol-Haller / Ariel Macaspac Hernandez / Miriam Prys-Hansen / Tomas Costa de Azevedo Marques
Global Studies Quarterly | 2026
This article offers a new theoretical framework to capture the current developments in global governance through the lens of strategic pluralism, normative blending, and polycentricity. Rather than viewing current dynamics as mere fragmentation or institutional decline, the article foregrounds the argument that they signal a structural transformation in global governance. Using illustrative empirical snapshots from different world regions, it argues that actors from the Global South are not passive recipients of global norms but strategic co-creators, experimenting with flexible and context-specific forms of authority. Strategic pluralism captures their pragmatic engagement across diverse alliances and institutions; normative blending highlights the blending and repurposing of global, regional, and local values; and polycentricity describes the emergence of a decentralized, multi-scalar configuration of authority.
Global Studies Quarterly