Can Ubuntu Survive in a Multipolar World Marked by Distrust?
The contemporary international system is moving toward multipolarity. The relative dominance of a single hegemon has given way to competitive coexistence among major centers of power, including the United States , China , the Russia , and the European Union . Alongside these actors, middle powers and regional blocs assert greater autonomy. This redistribution of influence does not automatically generate cooperation. Instead, it often amplifies distrust: technological decoupling, sanctions regimes, proxy conflicts, and strategic hedging have become normalized. Within such an environment, Ubuntu—a relational philosophy grounded in interdependence, dignity, and shared humanity—appears vulnerable. Distrust thrives on suspicion and competitive self-preservation; Ubuntu thrives on reciprocity and mutual recognition. The tension is evident. The key question is whether Ubuntu can endure, adapt, or even shape a multipolar order structured by strategic anxiety. 1. Multipolarity and the ...