Carlos Fortin is a research fellow emeritus at the Institute of Development Studies (IDS), University of Sussex, and a former assistant secretary-general of UNCTAD. Jorge Heine is a research professor at the Pardee School of Global Studies, Boston University, and a former Chilean ambassador to China, India and South Africa. Carlos Ominami is a director of the Chile 21 Foundation in Santiago, a former minister of economic affairs in the Chilean government, and a former senator.
“Latin American Foreign Policies in the New World Order: The Active Non-Alignment Option is a must-read for policymakers and scholars aiming for Latin American and other once-peripheral nations to exercise effective agency in a world of changing core powers and modes of competition. The scholar-practitioner contributors to this volume present strategies for lesser powers to maintain equidistance from great powers, to pursue their own agendas, and to help prevent a ‘New Cold War” — Louis W. Goodman, Dean Emeritus, School of International Service, American University, Washington DC. “The world today is witnessing intensified great power competition, especially between the United States and China. Yet, most of the global south rejects taking sides in the rivalry, viewing it as a grave threat to peace and stability. Reviving but significantly updating the idea of non-alignment, this book charts a timely, fascinating, and realistic approach to the ‘return of geopolitics’ that would be of great interest to scholars, policymakers and media trying to make sense of the future of world order” — AmitavAcharya, Distinguished Professor, School of International Service, American University, and past president, International Studies Association (ISA). “As established norms and expectations, relationships at every level, and both community and communications are challenged around the world, three outstanding Chilean scholars and practitioners of international relations have assembled a highly qualified international symposium on how to understand and respond to a world in flux. Focused on how Latin American countries should respond, this book is highly recommended for those who want to be ready for global change in Africa, Europe, West, East, and South Asia, and throughout the Americas, North and South. The book is insightful, constructive, and likely influential”— Abraham F. Lowenthal, Professor Emeritus of International Relations, University of Southern California. “The work of defining and defending Latin American countries’ own interests amid a fierce contest between geopolitical giants elsewhere gains clarity and energy from the sophisticated economic analysis, historical perspective, and firsthand insights found in this volume. It’s an essential contribution to one of the biggest questions facing Latin American foreign policies today”— Catherine Osborn, columnist, Foreign Policy Magazine. Active non-alignment has many controversial angles, not least going against the current request of weapons to Ukraine. It also pushes Latin American countries to face the challenge of competing in the strategic framework of integration — Mariano Aguirre, Associate Fellow, International Security Programme; Chatham House . In the book Latin American Foreign Policies in the New World Order, Carlos Fortin, Jorge Heine, and Carlos Ominami have compiled learned contributions from eminent Latin American personalities to give us this well-researched, reviewed, and redacted compendium on the central theme of active non-alignment (ANA). This is a seminal work that articulates the basis of much of the region's modern foreign policy. It is as timely, as it is relevant —Deepak Bhojwani, The Wire