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Bipolar Confrontation in Global Politics: History, Philosophy and Challenges: As Witnessed Above and Beyond September 11th 2001 Attacks on the Us and Typified in the Current Boko Haram Saga in Nigeria

Ugwu Ude and Moko Finian

Humanities and Social Sciences Letters, 2015, vol. 3, issue 1, 10-24

Abstract: The current study is a contribution to existing literatures in search of international peace and global stability. The study adopts a new estimation methodology adopted every non-empirical, philosophical and theoretical researches. The study originates a new formula showing a deepening concern over US’ over-activated denial of genuine sovereignty to nations of the Arab Spring in our Post-September 11, 2011 Global Response to Sept. 11th 2011 Attacks on the US by Osama-Led Al-Qaida Groups. The study is therefore one of the few studies which have investigated into the rights of ‘underdog nations’, such as Iraq and Nigeria, under the current bipolar confrontation between the US and a seeming Arab Hegemony. The paper is a contribution to the first logical analysis of the history, the philosophy, and the challenges of the realists power-drunk approach to international politics around which the present bipolar politics between the US and an emerging Arab Hegemony seems to have been built. The main finding of the paper is its discovery that the power-based realists philosophy of bipolarity is to be rejected if the international community must move beyond the Sept. 11, 2011 event. The research documents and sources are materials which include books, internet articles, paper publications and input from journals.

Keywords: History; Philosophwy; Challenges; Bipolar confrontations; Global politics; Post-Sept. Attacks on the US; Boko Haram Saga in Nigeria; Oppression of the Arab Spring; Rights of underdog nations in global politics (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2015
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