Rules-Based International Order

Overview

For thousands of years, major powers ruled through military force, expanding empires, extracting resources from colonized lands, and settling disputes through conflict—not diplomacy or law. After two destructive 20th-century world wars, leading powers worked with the broader international community to establish a system of institutions, treaties, and norms to create stability and prevent economic chaos and unchecked aggression.

1440 Findings

Hours of research by our editors, distilled into minutes of clarity.

  • Many years ago, the US dollar became the world's primary reserve currency

    In 1944, 44 nations gathered in Bretton Woods, New Hampshire, to rebuild the global economy. The result? The US dollar became the world’s reserve currency, backed by gold.

  • How Stalin, Roosevelt, and Churchill shaped the postwar world

    The Yalta Conference was a pivotal 1945 meeting between Allied leaders that helped shape the postwar global order and laid the groundwork for the founding of the United Nations.

  • The United Nations was founded in San Francisco in 1945

    The 1945 San Francisco Conference brought together delegates from 50 nations to draft the United Nations Charter, laying the foundation for the UN. This archival footage from the UN captures the event's atmosphere, showcasing firsthand reactions and the global hope for peace after World War II.

  • The world is shifting from unipolarity toward a multipolar order

    The post-Cold War world was briefly unipolar after 1991, with the US standing alone as a global superpower following decades of US-Soviet bipolarity. Analysts increasingly describe today's order as multipolar, with China, Russia, the US, and regional powers all competing for influence.

  • The formation of the UN elevated the US on the world stage

    This podcast episode of "To the Best of My Ability" from the National WWII Museum goes behind the scenes of the United Nations' founding from the American perspective. It explores how FDR's vision for global peace took shape, how Truman carried it forward, and how Eleanor Roosevelt helped define human rights—set against the backdrop of wartime diplomacy, Cold War tensions, and the San Francisco Conference, where the UN Charter was signed.

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