It is in this context that global governance has emerged as an approach to explaining and tackling shared problems facing the international community, through a diverse network of actors including states, international organisations, the private sector, and civil society. Global governance not only reflects efforts to coordinate action at the international level, but also reveals the limits, contradictions, and power asymmetries involved in managing global issues.
For International Relations students in particular, and for students interested in global politics in general, understanding contemporary international politics cannot stop at inter-state relations alone. It requires grasping how global issues are produced, debated, and governed within an increasingly complex international system.
Therefore, this course of Global Governance provides an essential analytical framework that enables students to engage with contemporary world dynamics in a systematic, multidimensional way, with academic depth.







