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BRICS and the Question of Order: Power Shifts, Internal Divisions, and Future Prospects

Is BRICS a cohesive and robust organization capable of shaping an alternative global order, or does it remain a fragmented and informal grouping constrained by structural challenges to internal unity? This issue lies at the heart of recent scholarly debates and is the central focus of three books reviewed in this article: The Role of BRICS in Large-Scale Armed Conflict: Building a Multi-Polar World Order by Malte Brosig, Russia, BRICS, and the Disruption of Global Order by Rachel S. Salzman, and Future of the BRICS and the Role of Russia and China by Junuguru Srinivas.

BRICS and the Question of Order Power Shifts Internal Divisions
 

 

 

 

Future of the BRICS and the Role of Russia and China

By Junuguru Srinivas

London: Palgrave Macmillian, 2022, 198 pages, €129.99, ISBN: 9789811911149

 

Russia, BRICS, and the Disruption of Global Order

 

By Rachel S. Salzman

Washington: Georgetown University Press, 2019, 200 pages, $104.95, ISBN: 9781626166608

 

The Role of BRICS in Large-Scale Armed Conflict: Building a Multi-Polar World Order

 

By Malte Brosig

London: Palgrave Macmillian, 2019, 205 pages, €69.99, ISBN: 9783030185367

 

 

Introduction

 

The BRICS grouping —comprising Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa, Egypt, Ethiopia, Iran, United Arab Emirates, and Indonesia— has an increasingly significant role in contemporary global politics. Established in 2009, initially with only the first four members (as listed above) from which it takes its name. South Africa joined a year later and the remaining enlargement in 2024 brought it to its current state. While invitations were extended to Argentina and Saudi Arabia, the former declined the offer after its new president, Javier Milei, rejected the plan to join the group, and Saudi Arabia has yet to make a final decision. BRICS was conceived as a response to the perceived dominance of Western powers in international institutions, which we

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