The Networked Empire in a Multipolar World explores how power has evolved from traditional territorial empires to complex networks of influence that operate through technology, finance, education, data, and institutional legitimacy. The book argues that in the twenty-first century, geopolitical influence is increasingly exercised through interconnected systems rather than military conquest or direct political control.
It examines how technological infrastructures, financial networks, elite educational institutions, digital platforms, and transnational organizations shape global power relationships. The concept of the "networked empire" describes systems that gain influence through legitimacy, integration, and dependency rather than coercion. The book analyzes how sovereignty, governance, and national security are being transformed by globalization and technological interdependence.
Ultimately, it contends that the central geopolitical challenge of our era is understanding who controls the systems that organize communication, knowledge, finance, and strategic dependency.
The Networked Empire in a Multipolar World explores how power has evolved from traditional territorial empires to complex networks of influence that operate through technology, finance, education, data, and institutional legitimacy. The book argues that in the twenty-first century, geopolitical influence is increasingly exercised through interconnected systems rather than military conquest or direct political control.
It examines how technological infrastructures, financial networks, elite educational institutions, digital platforms, and transnational organizations shape global power relationships. The concept of the "networked empire" describes systems that gain influence through legitimacy, integration, and dependency rather than coercion. The book analyzes how sovereignty, governance, and national security are being transformed by globalization and technological interdependence.
Ultimately, it contends that the central geopolitical challenge of our era is understanding who controls the systems that organize communication, knowledge, finance, and strategic dependency.