Neo-Imperial Geography and Global Justice: Reassessing Dependency and Inequality in Contemporary International Political Theory The twenty-first century global order is marked by an acute paradox: while globalization has ostensibly integrated the world into a single network of production, consumption, and finance, it has simultaneously reproduced and deepened historical inequalities between core and periphery. The spatial … Continue reading Can the global spatial distribution of production, consumption, and finance be understood through a neo-imperial geography of inequality, perpetuating dependency patterns identified by world-systems theory? How should contemporary international political theory conceptualize moral responsibility and distributive justice in a world fundamentally shaped by natural and structural inequalities that cannot be entirely eliminated?