Theoretical Framework

The Market Made World Order

Global power is no longer anchored solely to territory. We analyze the emerging architecture of international relations governed by networks, protocols, and capital flows.

Stark wide-angle of a massive automated deepwater shipping terminal at dusk, cool blue tones, high-contrast shadows, architectural geometry.
Stark wide-angle of a massive automated deepwater shipping terminal at dusk, cool blue tones, high-contrast shadows, architectural geometry.
Systemic Nodes

The New Chokepoints

Physical straits have yielded to software protocols and supply chain nodes. Modern power belongs to the actors controlling critical technological standards and specialized logistics corridors.

By mapping these operational choke points, we expose how non-state networks enforce compliance across sovereign borders without military intervention.

Network Governance

Functional Sovereignty

Sovereignty is no longer absolute. It is functional, distributed, and exercised through platform architecture and capital networks.

Platform Governance

Capital Networks

Digital platforms dictate the boundaries of modern commerce and speech, establishing private regulatory regimes that supersede state laws.

Global capital flows operate via sovereign protocols, routing around territorial jurisdictions to enforce structural market discipline.

The Comparative Paradigm

Contrast the Market Made World Order with classical Realism, Liberalism, and the English School.