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Out-of-the-box thinking required for new world order: Khurshid

New Delhi: External Affairs Minister Salman Khurshid today pitched for out-of-the-box thinking to give birth to a new global order which could effectively deal with various key challenges facing the world.He said the “outdated 1945

PTI Updated on: December 10, 2013 22:11 IST
out of the box thinking required for new world order
out of the box thinking required for new world order khurshid

New Delhi: External Affairs Minister Salman Khurshid today pitched for out-of-the-box thinking to give birth to a new global order which could effectively deal with various key challenges facing the world.


He said the “outdated 1945 model” of the United Nations and the UN Security Council required an “urgent upgrade” and an “urgent reform” to substantially restructure the world order. Khurshid was delivering a lecture at the third Convention of International Studies Scholars at Jawaharlal Nehru University here.


“...the perspectives the South can achieve fruition only when the world order is substantially restructured to reflect those power shifts and this is where really the outdated 1945 model of the United Nations and the UN Security Council calls for an urgent upgrade and an urgent reform,” he said.

Khurshid said “in re-imagining the global order, the theorists and practitioners of international relations have to push the envelope and think out-of-the-box to help give birth to a new global order which is reflective of the philosophy of the world as a family.”

Talking about India, he said the country was not willing to play the role of a global power in the manner in which “others” have conceived that role for themselves, but to play it in a different manner of close interaction, capacity building and helping institutions to grow.

He said reform in the United Nations would enable all nation states to effectively grapple with a host of key challenges like security and ensuring development “Exceptionalisation and isolationism are hardly viable options. Intense and sustained global cooperation is required to deal with a range of security challenges including terrorism, extremism, maritime piracy, cyber threats, disasters and pandemics,” he said.

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