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Towards a UN with Chinese Characteristics? Heralding Shifts in Multilateral Order
Research

Towards a UN with Chinese Characteristics? Heralding Shifts in Multilateral Order

Patterns in Beijing’s multilateral priorities suggest what a growing Chinese footprint may portend for the future of the UN.

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By Rosemary Foot and Sebastian Haug
Published on Feb 24, 2026
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Global Order and Institutions

Carnegie’s Global Order and Institutions Program identifies promising new multilateral initiatives and frameworks to realize a more peaceful, prosperous, just, and sustainable world. That mission has never been more important, or more challenging. Geopolitical competition, populist nationalism, economic inequality, technological innovation, and a planetary ecological emergency are testing the rules-based international order and complicating collective responses to shared threats. Our mission is to design global solutions to global problems.

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About the Authors

Rosemary Foot

University of Oxford

Sebastian Haug

Authors

Rosemary Foot
University of Oxford
Sebastian Haug
United Nations

Carnegie does not take institutional positions on public policy issues; the views represented herein are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of Carnegie, its staff, or its trustees.

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