Geopolitical Thinkers: Difference between revisions

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=Geopolitical Schools Ranked by Alignment with Open Source Ecology=
=Geopolitical Schools Ranked by Alignment with Open Source Ecology (Top 50)=


{| class="wikitable sortable"
{| class="wikitable sortable"
! Rank (OSE Alignment)
! Rank (OSE Alignment)
! School of Thought
! School
! Core Driver
! Core Idea
! Key Idea
! Top Thinkers (3)
! Representative Thinkers
! Video 1
! Video 2
|-
|-
|1
|1
|Distributed Civilization Systems
|Distributed Civilization Systems
|Collaborative infrastructure
|Civilization built through open collaboration networks
|Civilization built through open collaborative networks
|Elinor Ostrom; Buckminster Fuller; Marcin Jakubowski
|Open Source Ecology, Elinor Ostrom
|Ostrom – Governing the Commons lecture
|Fuller – World Game / Design Science lecture
|-
|-
|2
|2
|Infrastructure Geopolitics
|Infrastructure Geopolitics
|Physical systems
|Infrastructure networks determine global power
|Infrastructure networks determine global integration
|Parag Khanna; Deborah Cowen; Bent Flyvbjerg
|Parag Khanna
|Khanna – Connectography talk
|Khanna – Mapping Geopolitical Megatrends podcast
|-
|-
|3
|3
|Network Civilization Theory
|Network Civilization
|Global connectivity
|Power flows through networks instead of states
|Power flows through networks rather than states
|Manuel Castells; Albert-László Barabási; Parag Khanna
|Manuel Castells
|Castells – Network Society lecture
|Barabási – Network science talk
|-
|-
|4
|4
|Commons Governance
|Commons Governance
|Shared resource management
|Shared resources governed collectively
|Collective stewardship of shared resources
|Elinor Ostrom; David Bollier; Michel Bauwens
|Elinor Ostrom
|Ostrom – Nobel lecture
|Bauwens – P2P civilization talk
|-
|-
|5
|5
|Cooperative Economics
|Regenerative Civilization
|Collaborative production
|Economy aligned with ecosystem regeneration
|Worker and community owned economic systems
|John Fullerton; Kate Raworth; Donella Meadows
|Gar Alperovitz
|Raworth – Doughnut economics talk
|Fullerton – Regenerative economy talk
|-
|-
|6
|6
|Technological Abundance
|Technological Abundance
|Automation and productivity
|Technology reduces scarcity
|Technology reduces scarcity and enables universal prosperity
|Buckminster Fuller; Peter Diamandis; Ray Kurzweil
|Buckminster Fuller
|Fuller – Operating Manual for Spaceship Earth
|Diamandis – Abundance talk
|-
|-
|7
|7
|Open Technology Civilization
|Open Technology Civilization
|Open hardware
|Open hardware accelerates innovation
|Shared technology platforms accelerate civilization
|Eric von Hippel; Marcin Jakubowski; Neil Gershenfeld
|OSE tradition
|Gershenfeld – How to Make Almost Anything
|von Hippel – Democratizing Innovation talk
|-
|-
|8
|8
|Regenerative Civilization
|Distributed Manufacturing
|Ecological systems
|Local digital fabrication networks
|Civilization aligned with ecosystem regeneration
|Neil Gershenfeld; Hod Lipson; Adrian Bowyer
|John Fullerton
|Gershenfeld – Fab Labs lecture
|Bowyer – RepRap project talk
|-
|-
|9
|9
|Solar Civilization Theory
|Ecological Economics
|Renewable energy
|Economy embedded within ecosystems
|Energy transition reshapes global order
|Herman Daly; Kate Raworth; Tim Jackson
|Vaclav Smil
|Daly – Steady state economy lecture
|Raworth – Doughnut economics keynote
|-
|-
|10
|10
|Ecological Economics
|Solar Civilization
|Planetary limits
|Renewable energy reshapes geopolitics
|Economy embedded within ecological systems
|Vaclav Smil; Amory Lovins; Tony Seba
|Herman Daly
|Smil – Energy transitions lecture
|Seba – Clean disruption talk
|-
|-
|11
|11
|Bioregional Geopolitics
|Bioregional Geopolitics
|Regional ecosystems
|Politics aligned with ecosystems
|Political systems aligned with ecological regions
|Kirkpatrick Sale; Gary Snyder; Peter Berg
|Kirkpatrick Sale
|Sale – Bioregionalism talk
|Snyder – Ecology and civilization lecture
|-
|-
|12
|12
|Circular Economy Geopolitics
|Circular Economy
|Material cycles
|Closed-loop material flows
|Closed-loop production systems reshape global trade
|Walter Stahel; Ellen MacArthur; Ken Webster
|Walter Stahel
|MacArthur – Circular economy talk
|Stahel – Performance economy lecture
|-
|-
|13
|13
|Human Flourishing Theory
|Human Flourishing Theory
|Wellbeing
|Geopolitics focused on human wellbeing
|Geopolitics oriented toward human development
|Amartya Sen; Martha Nussbaum; Jeffrey Sachs
|Amartya Sen
|Sen – Development as freedom talk
|Sachs – Sustainable development lecture
|-
|-
|14
|14
|Distributed Manufacturing
|Resilience Geopolitics
|Local industry
|Distributed systems resist shocks
|Localized production reduces global dependency
|Nassim Taleb; Brian Walker; Fikret Berkes
|Neil Gershenfeld
|Taleb – Antifragile lecture
|Walker – Resilience thinking talk
|-
|-
|15
|15
|Appropriate Technology
|Supply Chain Geopolitics
|Small-scale tools
|Logistics networks determine power
|Technology scaled to human and ecological needs
|Deborah Cowen; Marc Levinson; Peter Zeihan
|E.F. Schumacher
|Cowen – Logistics revolution talk
|Zeihan – Global supply chain lecture
|-
|-
|16
|16
|Post-Scarcity Economics
|Urban Network Geopolitics
|Automation
|Cities rival states
|Automation removes economic scarcity
|Saskia Sassen; Richard Florida; Edward Glaeser
|Paul Mason
|Sassen – Global cities lecture
|Florida – Rise of the creative class talk
|-
|-
|17
|17
|Resilience Geopolitics
|Technological Geopolitics
|System resilience
|Industrial innovation shapes power
|Robust distributed systems prevent collapse
|Vaclav Smil; Carlota Perez; Mariana Mazzucato
|Nassim Taleb
|Perez – Tech revolutions lecture
|Mazzucato – Entrepreneurial state talk
|-
|-
|18
|18
|Planetary Stewardship
|Energy Systems Geopolitics
|Global commons
|Energy systems determine alliances
|Human civilization as steward of Earth systems
|Daniel Yergin; Vaclav Smil; Fatih Birol
|Johan Rockström
|Yergin – Energy geopolitics talk
|Birol – Energy transition keynote
|-
|-
|19
|19
|Supply Chain Geopolitics
|Geoeconomics
|Logistics networks
|Economic leverage replaces war
|Control of supply chains determines power
|Edward Luttwak; Ian Bremmer; Robert Blackwill
|Deborah Cowen
|Bremmer – G-Zero world talk
|Luttwak – Geoeconomics lecture
|-
|-
|20
|20
|Urban Network Geopolitics
|Institutional Liberalism
|Megacities
|Institutions enable cooperation
|Cities increasingly rival states
|Joseph Nye; Robert Keohane; Anne-Marie Slaughter
|Saskia Sassen
|Nye – Soft power lecture
|Slaughter – Networked governance talk
|-
|-
|21
|21
|Technological Geopolitics
|Soft Power Geopolitics
|Industrial capacity
|Cultural attraction shapes influence
|Technological innovation determines power
|Joseph Nye; Fareed Zakaria; Ian Bremmer
|Vaclav Smil
|Nye – Future of power talk
|Zakaria – Global order lecture
|-
|-
|22
|22
|Energy Systems Geopolitics
|Complex Systems Geopolitics
|Energy infrastructure
|Global systems behave non-linearly
|Energy systems determine strategic stability
|Donella Meadows; Yaneer Bar-Yam; Geoffrey West
|Daniel Yergin
|Meadows – Systems thinking lecture
|West – Scaling laws talk
|-
|-
|23
|23
|Geoeconomics
|Demographic Geopolitics
|Economic networks
|Population structures shape power
|Economic leverage replaces military conflict
|Peter Zeihan; Nicholas Eberstadt; Jack Goldstone
|Edward Luttwak
|Zeihan – Demography lecture
|Eberstadt – Population collapse talk
|-
|-
|24
|24
|Developmental State Theory
|Geographic Determinism
|Industrial policy
|Geography shapes strategic options
|State-guided development builds national power
|Halford Mackinder; Nicholas Spykman; Robert Kaplan
|Chalmers Johnson
|Kaplan – Geopolitics in the 21st century
|Kaplan – Revenge of geography talk
|-
|-
|25
|25
|Institutional Liberalism
|Sea Power School
|International institutions
|Naval dominance shapes history
|Global governance reduces conflict
|Alfred Thayer Mahan; Nicholas Lambert; James Holmes
|Robert Keohane
|Holmes – Sea power lecture
|Mahan theory overview lecture
|-
|-
|26
|26
|Soft Power Geopolitics
|Realism
|Cultural influence
|States pursue survival and power
|Attraction shapes geopolitical influence
|Hans Morgenthau; John Mearsheimer; Stephen Walt
|Joseph Nye
|Mearsheimer – Great power politics lecture
|Walt – Realism lecture
|-
|-
|27
|27
|Complex Systems Geopolitics
|Neorealism
|System dynamics
|System structure shapes state behavior
|Global systems behave as complex adaptive systems
|Kenneth Waltz; John Mearsheimer; Robert Jervis
|Santa Fe Institute tradition
|Mearsheimer – U.S. grand strategy talk
|Jervis – Security dilemma lecture
|-
|-
|28
|28
|Technocratic Governance
|Balance of Power
|Expert systems
|Alliance systems prevent dominance
|Technical expertise should guide policy
|Henry Kissinger; Kenneth Waltz; Hedley Bull
|Various technocratic movements
|Kissinger – World order talk
|Bull – International society lecture
|-
|-
|29
|29
|Strategic Stability Theory
|Civilizational Geopolitics
|Nuclear deterrence
|Civilizations shape conflicts
|Mutual deterrence prevents great-power war
|Samuel Huntington; Arnold Toynbee; Oswald Spengler
|Thomas Schelling
|Huntington – Clash of civilizations talk
|Toynbee – History lecture
|-
|-
|30
|30
|Demographic Geopolitics
|World Systems Theory
|Population structure
|Core-periphery global economy
|Age distribution shapes national stability
|Immanuel Wallerstein; Giovanni Arrighi; Samir Amin
|Nicholas Eberstadt
|Wallerstein – World system lecture
|Arrighi – Global capitalism talk
|-
|-
|31
|31
|Geographic Determinism
|Dependency Theory
|Terrain
|Periphery exploited by core
|Geography constrains political power
|Andre Gunder Frank; Samir Amin; Raul Prebisch
|Halford Mackinder
|Amin – Dependency lecture
|Frank – Development critique talk
|-
|-
|32
|32
|Rimland Theory
|Constructivism
|Coastal Eurasia
|Ideas and norms shape global politics
|Control of coastal regions determines power
|Alexander Wendt; Peter Katzenstein; Martha Finnemore
|Nicholas Spykman
|Wendt – Constructivism lecture
|Finnemore – Norms in international politics
|-
|-
|33
|33
|Heartland Theory
|Critical Geopolitics
|Eurasian core
|Narratives shape geopolitical perception
|Control of Eurasia determines global dominance
|Gearóid Ó Tuathail; Simon Dalby; Klaus Dodds
|Halford Mackinder
|Ó Tuathail – Critical geopolitics lecture
|Dodds – Geopolitics and media talk
|-
|-
|34
|34
|Sea Power School
|Hegemonic Stability
|Naval dominance
|A dominant power stabilizes order
|Control of sea lanes shapes world order
|Robert Gilpin; Charles Kindleberger; G. John Ikenberry
|Alfred Thayer Mahan
|Ikenberry – Liberal order talk
|Gilpin – Power and change lecture
|-
|-
|35
|35
|Land Power Geopolitics
|Multipolarity Theory
|Continental armies
|Multiple great powers balance system
|Large land armies dominate continental systems
|Henry Kissinger; Richard Haass; Charles Kupchan
|Karl Haushofer
|Haass – Multipolar world lecture
|Kupchan – Post-American world talk
|-
|-
|36
|36
|Realism
|Energy Transition Geopolitics
|Power competition
|Renewable transition reshapes alliances
|States pursue survival in an anarchic system
|Fatih Birol; Daniel Yergin; Vaclav Smil
|Hans Morgenthau
|Birol – Energy future keynote
|Yergin – New map talk
|-
|-
|37
|37
|Neorealism
|Climate Security
|Structural competition
|Climate drives geopolitical instability
|International structure shapes state behavior
|Johan Rockström; Michael Mann; Katharine Hayhoe
|Kenneth Waltz
|Rockström – Planetary boundaries talk
|Mann – Climate geopolitics lecture
|-
|-
|38
|38
|Offensive Realism
|Water Geopolitics
|Power maximization
|Water scarcity drives conflict
|Great powers seek regional dominance
|Aaron Wolf; Peter Gleick; Brahma Chellaney
|John Mearsheimer
|Gleick – Water security talk
|Wolf – Water conflict lecture
|-
|-
|39
|39
|Defensive Realism
|Food Security Geopolitics
|Security balancing
|Food systems shape political stability
|States seek security rather than domination
|Vaclav Smil; Lester Brown; Tim Lang
|Stephen Walt
|Smil – Food systems lecture
|Brown – Food crisis talk
|-
|-
|40
|40
|Balance of Power Theory
|Migration Geopolitics
|Alliance systems
|Population movement reshapes politics
|Power balances prevent hegemony
|Hein de Haas; Saskia Sassen; Douglas Massey
|Henry Kissinger
|de Haas – Migration myths lecture
|Sassen – Migration talk
|-
|-
|41
|41
|Civilizational Clash Theory
|Cyber Geopolitics
|Cultural blocs
|Digital infrastructure shapes power
|Civilizations are primary units of conflict
|Joseph Nye; Bruce Schneier; P.W. Singer
|Samuel Huntington
|Schneier – Cybersecurity talk
|Singer – Cyber warfare lecture
|-
|-
|42
|42
|Historical Cycles Theory
|Platform Geopolitics
|Long historical cycles
|Technology platforms rival states
|Empires rise and fall in predictable patterns
|Nick Srnicek; Shoshana Zuboff; Yanis Varoufakis
|Arnold Toynbee
|Zuboff – Surveillance capitalism talk
|Varoufakis – Techno-feudalism lecture
|-
|-
|43
|43
|Imperial Geopolitics
|AI Geopolitics
|Empire building
|AI capability determines global power
|Great powers expand territorially
|Nick Bostrom; Demis Hassabis; Yoshua Bengio
|Various imperial strategists
|Bostrom – Superintelligence talk
|Bengio – AI governance lecture
|-
|-
|44
|44
|Great Man Geopolitics
|Space Geopolitics
|Leadership
|Orbital infrastructure becomes strategic
|Individual leaders shape geopolitical outcomes
|Everett Dolman; Peter Garretson; Joan Johnson-Freese
|Thomas Carlyle tradition
|Dolman – Astropolitics lecture
|Garretson – Space power talk
|-
|-
|45
|45
|Ideological Geopolitics
|Corporate Geopolitics
|Political ideology
|Multinationals rival states
|Ideas drive global alliances and conflicts
|Susan Strange; Ian Bremmer; Parag Khanna
|Francis Fukuyama
|Strange – Structural power lecture
|Bremmer – Global political risk talk
|-
|-
|46
|46
|Cold War Containment Strategy
|Techno-Feudalism
|Strategic containment
|Platforms replace traditional capitalism
|Prevent expansion of rival powers
|Yanis Varoufakis; Shoshana Zuboff; Nick Srnicek
|George Kennan
|Varoufakis – Techno-feudalism talk
|Zuboff – Surveillance capitalism lecture
|-
|-
|47
|47
|Nuclear Geopolitics
|Post-National Governance
|Strategic weapons
|Nation states weaken over time
|Nuclear deterrence reshapes global power
|Ulrich Beck; Jürgen Habermas; David Held
|Bernard Brodie
|Habermas – Postnational constellation talk
|Held – Global governance lecture
|-
|-
|48
|48
|Military Industrial Geopolitics
|Cosmopolitan Globalism
|Defense industries
|Humanity transcends nation states
|Industrial capacity drives military power
|Kwame Anthony Appiah; Martha Nussbaum; Ulrich Beck
|Dwight Eisenhower warning
|Appiah – Cosmopolitanism lecture
|Nussbaum – Global justice talk
|-
|-
|49
|49
|Strategic Resources School
|Planetary Civilization
|Resource access
|Human civilization becomes planetary
|Control of resources determines power
|Carl Sagan; Freeman Dyson; Kim Stanley Robinson
|Various energy analysts
|Sagan – Pale blue dot lecture
|Robinson – Future of civilization talk
|-
|-
|50
|50
|Petro-Geopolitics
|Collapse Theory
|Oil systems
|Civilizations collapse from complexity
|Oil production shapes global politics
|Joseph Tainter; Jared Diamond; Peter Turchin
|Daniel Yergin
|Tainter – Collapse lecture
|Diamond – Collapse talk
|}
 
=Geopolitical Thinker Map Relative to Open Source Ecology=
 
{| class="wikitable sortable"
! Alignment Level
! Category
! Thinkers
! Core Assumption About Civilization
! Compatibility with OSE
|-
|-
|51
|Very High
|Financial Geopolitics
|Commons & Collaborative Civilization
|Currency dominance
|Elinor Ostrom; Buckminster Fuller; Michel Bauwens; David Bollier
|Control of global finance shapes power
|Civilization can organize through cooperative governance of shared systems
|Barry Eichengreen
|Extremely aligned – same philosophical foundation
|-
|-
|52
|Very High
|Monetary Hegemony
|Open Technology / Distributed Production
|Reserve currency
|Neil Gershenfeld; Eric von Hippel; Adrian Bowyer
|Currency dominance enables geopolitical leverage
|Innovation emerges from open collaborative engineering ecosystems
|Charles Kindleberger
|Directly aligned with OSE open hardware model
|-
|-
|53
|High
|Trade Network Geopolitics
|Ecological Civilization
|Global trade
|Herman Daly; Kate Raworth; Donella Meadows
|Trade routes determine global power
|Economy must operate within planetary ecological boundaries
|Fernand Braudel
|Strong alignment with regenerative infrastructure goals
|-
|-
|54
|High
|Maritime Trade Systems
|Infrastructure Civilization
|Shipping networks
|Parag Khanna; Bent Flyvbjerg; Deborah Cowen
|Sea trade determines economic power
|Infrastructure networks shape global development
|Various maritime historians
|Aligned with OSE infrastructure-first civilization strategy
|-
|-
|55
|High
|Information Geopolitics
|Technological Abundance
|Information flows
|Buckminster Fuller; Peter Diamandis; Ray Kurzweil
|Narratives and media shape power
|Technology can eliminate material scarcity
|Zbigniew Brzezinski
|Compatible with OSE post-scarcity industrial systems
|-
|-
|56
|Moderate
|Cyber Geopolitics
|Complex Systems & Resilience
|Digital infrastructure
|Nassim Taleb; Geoffrey West; Yaneer Bar-Yam
|Cyber capability reshapes warfare
|Societies behave as complex adaptive systems
|Various security analysts
|Useful analytical framework for distributed civilization
|-
|-
|57
|Moderate
|Platform Geopolitics
|Institutional Liberalism
|Digital platforms
|Joseph Nye; Robert Keohane; Anne-Marie Slaughter
|Large platforms become geopolitical actors
|Institutions and cooperation reduce conflict
|Nick Srnicek
|Partial alignment but still state-centric
|-
|-
|58
|Moderate
|Surveillance State Theory
|Geoeconomics
|Information control
|Edward Luttwak; Ian Bremmer; Robert Blackwill
|States control populations through surveillance
|Economic leverage drives geopolitical power
|Various critical theorists
|Compatible analytically but assumes competitive states
|-
|-
|59
|Moderate
|Authoritarian Stability Theory
|Technological Geopolitics
|Centralized control
|Vaclav Smil; Mariana Mazzucato; Carlota Perez
|Strong centralized states maintain order
|Industrial and technological capacity shapes global order
|Various authoritarian theorists
|Compatible with OSE industrial development goals
|-
|-
|60
|Neutral
|Totalitarian State Theory
|Geographic Determinism
|Absolute state control
|Halford Mackinder; Nicholas Spykman; Robert Kaplan
|State dominates all social systems
|Geography strongly constrains political power
|Hannah Arendt analysis
|Descriptive but not aligned with cooperative paradigm
|-
|-
|61
|Neutral
|Fascist Geopolitics
|Demographic Geopolitics
|Expansionist nationalism
|Peter Zeihan; Nicholas Eberstadt; Jack Goldstone
|Militarized national expansion
|Population structure drives geopolitical change
|Carl Schmitt influence
|Informational but not philosophical alignment
|-
|-
|62
|Neutral
|Nazism
|World-Systems Theory
|Racial empire
|Immanuel Wallerstein; Giovanni Arrighi; Samir Amin
|Racial hierarchy drives expansion
|Global capitalist hierarchy structures world economy
|Nazi ideology
|Critical analysis but not solution-oriented
|-
|-
|63
|Low
|Communist Internationalism
|Realism
|Class revolution
|Hans Morgenthau; John Mearsheimer; Stephen Walt
|Global proletarian revolution
|States pursue power and survival in anarchic world
|Karl Marx tradition
|Conflicts with OSE cooperative assumptions
|-
|-
|64
|Low
|Leninist Imperial Theory
|Balance of Power
|Capitalist expansion
|Henry Kissinger; Hedley Bull; Kenneth Waltz
|Imperialism arises from capitalist competition
|Global stability arises from competing great powers
|Vladimir Lenin
|Assumes permanent geopolitical competition
|-
|-
|65
|Low
|Stalinist Geopolitics
|Civilizational Conflict
|State socialism
|Samuel Huntington; Bernard Lewis; Niall Ferguson
|Centralized communist power
|Civilizations inevitably clash
|Joseph Stalin
|Opposite of collaborative civilization premise
|-
|-
|66
|Very Low
|Maoist Revolutionary Geopolitics
|Imperial Geopolitics
|Peasant revolution
|Karl Haushofer; Alfred Thayer Mahan; Halford Mackinder
|Revolution spreads from rural movements
|Power derives from territorial and military expansion
|Mao Zedong
|Fundamentally incompatible with open civilization
|-
|67
|Dependency Theory
|Global inequality
|Periphery exploited by core economies
|Andre Gunder Frank
|-
|68
|World Systems Theory
|Core-periphery system
|Global capitalist hierarchy
|Immanuel Wallerstein
|-
|69
|Postcolonial Geopolitics
|Colonial legacy
|Colonial history shapes global order
|Edward Said
|-
|70
|Critical Geopolitics
|Discourse analysis
|Geopolitical narratives shape perception
|Gearóid Ó Tuathail
|-
|71
|Constructivism
|Social construction
|International norms shape behavior
|Alexander Wendt
|-
|72
|Normative International Theory
|Ethical frameworks
|Ethics influence global institutions
|Various philosophers
|-
|73
|Human Security Theory
|Individual wellbeing
|Security defined as protection of people
|UNDP tradition
|-
|74
|Global Governance Theory
|International institutions
|World governance structures evolve
|Anne-Marie Slaughter
|-
|75
|Multipolarity Theory
|Multiple power centers
|World shifts away from single hegemon
|Various strategists
|-
|76
|Hegemonic Stability Theory
|Global leadership
|A dominant power stabilizes global order
|Robert Gilpin
|-
|77
|American Primacy Theory
|US dominance
|US global leadership maintains order
|Various US strategists
|-
|78
|China-Centered World Theory
|Sinocentric order
|Asia reorganizes around China
|Various Chinese strategists
|-
|79
|Eurasianism
|Continental bloc
|Russia-centered Eurasian civilization
|Alexander Dugin
|-
|80
|Pan-Islamic Geopolitics
|Religious unity
|Islamic world political integration
|Various thinkers
|-
|81
|Pan-African Geopolitics
|African unity
|Continental political integration
|Kwame Nkrumah
|-
|82
|Pan-Asianism
|Asian solidarity
|Asia forms unified geopolitical bloc
|Various theorists
|-
|83
|Pan-Americanism
|Western hemisphere integration
|Americas unify economically and politically
|Various policy thinkers
|-
|84
|Strategic Autonomy Theory
|Regional independence
|Regions reduce dependency on great powers
|EU strategic thinkers
|-
|85
|Energy Transition Geopolitics
|Renewable shift
|Energy transition reshapes alliances
|Various climate strategists
|-
|86
|Climate Security Theory
|Climate impacts
|Climate change drives geopolitical instability
|Various climate security scholars
|-
|87
|Water Geopolitics
|Freshwater access
|Water scarcity drives conflict
|Various hydropolitics scholars
|-
|88
|Food Security Geopolitics
|Agricultural systems
|Food supply stability shapes power
|Various food system analysts
|-
|89
|Migration Geopolitics
|Population flows
|Migration reshapes political systems
|Various migration scholars
|-
|90
|Urban Security Theory
|Megacity governance
|Urban stability shapes national security
|Various urban theorists
|-
|91
|Technology Bloc Competition
|Innovation ecosystems
|Technological ecosystems compete globally
|Various tech strategists
|-
|92
|AI Geopolitics
|Artificial intelligence
|AI development reshapes global power
|Various AI policy thinkers
|-
|93
|Space Geopolitics
|Orbital infrastructure
|Control of space systems becomes strategic
|Various space strategists
|-
|94
|Orbital Industrialization
|Space manufacturing
|Space industry reshapes global economics
|Various futurists
|-
|95
|Planetary Civilization Theory
|Interplanetary expansion
|Human civilization expands beyond Earth
|Various futurists
|-
|96
|Cosmopolitan Globalism
|Global citizenship
|Humanity transcends national identity
|Various philosophers
|-
|97
|Post-National Governance
|Transnational institutions
|Nation states weaken over time
|Various political theorists
|-
|98
|Techno-Feudalism
|Platform monopolies
|Technology firms replace states
|Yanis Varoufakis
|-
|99
|Corporate Geopolitics
|Multinational power
|Corporations rival state authority
|Various analysts
|-
|-
|100
|Very Low
|Anarchic Collapse Theory
|Authoritarian Strategic Thought
|System breakdown
|Alexander Dugin; Carl Schmitt; Leo Strauss (strategic interpretations)
|Global systems collapse without governance
|Civilization organized through centralized power
|Various collapse theorists
|Opposes decentralized collaborative governance
|}
|}



Latest revision as of 04:46, 11 March 2026

Geopolitical Schools Ranked by Alignment with Open Source Ecology (Top 50)

Rank (OSE Alignment) School Core Idea Top Thinkers (3) Video 1 Video 2
1 Distributed Civilization Systems Civilization built through open collaboration networks Elinor Ostrom; Buckminster Fuller; Marcin Jakubowski Ostrom – Governing the Commons lecture Fuller – World Game / Design Science lecture
2 Infrastructure Geopolitics Infrastructure networks determine global power Parag Khanna; Deborah Cowen; Bent Flyvbjerg Khanna – Connectography talk Khanna – Mapping Geopolitical Megatrends podcast
3 Network Civilization Power flows through networks instead of states Manuel Castells; Albert-László Barabási; Parag Khanna Castells – Network Society lecture Barabási – Network science talk
4 Commons Governance Shared resources governed collectively Elinor Ostrom; David Bollier; Michel Bauwens Ostrom – Nobel lecture Bauwens – P2P civilization talk
5 Regenerative Civilization Economy aligned with ecosystem regeneration John Fullerton; Kate Raworth; Donella Meadows Raworth – Doughnut economics talk Fullerton – Regenerative economy talk
6 Technological Abundance Technology reduces scarcity Buckminster Fuller; Peter Diamandis; Ray Kurzweil Fuller – Operating Manual for Spaceship Earth Diamandis – Abundance talk
7 Open Technology Civilization Open hardware accelerates innovation Eric von Hippel; Marcin Jakubowski; Neil Gershenfeld Gershenfeld – How to Make Almost Anything von Hippel – Democratizing Innovation talk
8 Distributed Manufacturing Local digital fabrication networks Neil Gershenfeld; Hod Lipson; Adrian Bowyer Gershenfeld – Fab Labs lecture Bowyer – RepRap project talk
9 Ecological Economics Economy embedded within ecosystems Herman Daly; Kate Raworth; Tim Jackson Daly – Steady state economy lecture Raworth – Doughnut economics keynote
10 Solar Civilization Renewable energy reshapes geopolitics Vaclav Smil; Amory Lovins; Tony Seba Smil – Energy transitions lecture Seba – Clean disruption talk
11 Bioregional Geopolitics Politics aligned with ecosystems Kirkpatrick Sale; Gary Snyder; Peter Berg Sale – Bioregionalism talk Snyder – Ecology and civilization lecture
12 Circular Economy Closed-loop material flows Walter Stahel; Ellen MacArthur; Ken Webster MacArthur – Circular economy talk Stahel – Performance economy lecture
13 Human Flourishing Theory Geopolitics focused on human wellbeing Amartya Sen; Martha Nussbaum; Jeffrey Sachs Sen – Development as freedom talk Sachs – Sustainable development lecture
14 Resilience Geopolitics Distributed systems resist shocks Nassim Taleb; Brian Walker; Fikret Berkes Taleb – Antifragile lecture Walker – Resilience thinking talk
15 Supply Chain Geopolitics Logistics networks determine power Deborah Cowen; Marc Levinson; Peter Zeihan Cowen – Logistics revolution talk Zeihan – Global supply chain lecture
16 Urban Network Geopolitics Cities rival states Saskia Sassen; Richard Florida; Edward Glaeser Sassen – Global cities lecture Florida – Rise of the creative class talk
17 Technological Geopolitics Industrial innovation shapes power Vaclav Smil; Carlota Perez; Mariana Mazzucato Perez – Tech revolutions lecture Mazzucato – Entrepreneurial state talk
18 Energy Systems Geopolitics Energy systems determine alliances Daniel Yergin; Vaclav Smil; Fatih Birol Yergin – Energy geopolitics talk Birol – Energy transition keynote
19 Geoeconomics Economic leverage replaces war Edward Luttwak; Ian Bremmer; Robert Blackwill Bremmer – G-Zero world talk Luttwak – Geoeconomics lecture
20 Institutional Liberalism Institutions enable cooperation Joseph Nye; Robert Keohane; Anne-Marie Slaughter Nye – Soft power lecture Slaughter – Networked governance talk
21 Soft Power Geopolitics Cultural attraction shapes influence Joseph Nye; Fareed Zakaria; Ian Bremmer Nye – Future of power talk Zakaria – Global order lecture
22 Complex Systems Geopolitics Global systems behave non-linearly Donella Meadows; Yaneer Bar-Yam; Geoffrey West Meadows – Systems thinking lecture West – Scaling laws talk
23 Demographic Geopolitics Population structures shape power Peter Zeihan; Nicholas Eberstadt; Jack Goldstone Zeihan – Demography lecture Eberstadt – Population collapse talk
24 Geographic Determinism Geography shapes strategic options Halford Mackinder; Nicholas Spykman; Robert Kaplan Kaplan – Geopolitics in the 21st century Kaplan – Revenge of geography talk
25 Sea Power School Naval dominance shapes history Alfred Thayer Mahan; Nicholas Lambert; James Holmes Holmes – Sea power lecture Mahan theory overview lecture
26 Realism States pursue survival and power Hans Morgenthau; John Mearsheimer; Stephen Walt Mearsheimer – Great power politics lecture Walt – Realism lecture
27 Neorealism System structure shapes state behavior Kenneth Waltz; John Mearsheimer; Robert Jervis Mearsheimer – U.S. grand strategy talk Jervis – Security dilemma lecture
28 Balance of Power Alliance systems prevent dominance Henry Kissinger; Kenneth Waltz; Hedley Bull Kissinger – World order talk Bull – International society lecture
29 Civilizational Geopolitics Civilizations shape conflicts Samuel Huntington; Arnold Toynbee; Oswald Spengler Huntington – Clash of civilizations talk Toynbee – History lecture
30 World Systems Theory Core-periphery global economy Immanuel Wallerstein; Giovanni Arrighi; Samir Amin Wallerstein – World system lecture Arrighi – Global capitalism talk
31 Dependency Theory Periphery exploited by core Andre Gunder Frank; Samir Amin; Raul Prebisch Amin – Dependency lecture Frank – Development critique talk
32 Constructivism Ideas and norms shape global politics Alexander Wendt; Peter Katzenstein; Martha Finnemore Wendt – Constructivism lecture Finnemore – Norms in international politics
33 Critical Geopolitics Narratives shape geopolitical perception Gearóid Ó Tuathail; Simon Dalby; Klaus Dodds Ó Tuathail – Critical geopolitics lecture Dodds – Geopolitics and media talk
34 Hegemonic Stability A dominant power stabilizes order Robert Gilpin; Charles Kindleberger; G. John Ikenberry Ikenberry – Liberal order talk Gilpin – Power and change lecture
35 Multipolarity Theory Multiple great powers balance system Henry Kissinger; Richard Haass; Charles Kupchan Haass – Multipolar world lecture Kupchan – Post-American world talk
36 Energy Transition Geopolitics Renewable transition reshapes alliances Fatih Birol; Daniel Yergin; Vaclav Smil Birol – Energy future keynote Yergin – New map talk
37 Climate Security Climate drives geopolitical instability Johan Rockström; Michael Mann; Katharine Hayhoe Rockström – Planetary boundaries talk Mann – Climate geopolitics lecture
38 Water Geopolitics Water scarcity drives conflict Aaron Wolf; Peter Gleick; Brahma Chellaney Gleick – Water security talk Wolf – Water conflict lecture
39 Food Security Geopolitics Food systems shape political stability Vaclav Smil; Lester Brown; Tim Lang Smil – Food systems lecture Brown – Food crisis talk
40 Migration Geopolitics Population movement reshapes politics Hein de Haas; Saskia Sassen; Douglas Massey de Haas – Migration myths lecture Sassen – Migration talk
41 Cyber Geopolitics Digital infrastructure shapes power Joseph Nye; Bruce Schneier; P.W. Singer Schneier – Cybersecurity talk Singer – Cyber warfare lecture
42 Platform Geopolitics Technology platforms rival states Nick Srnicek; Shoshana Zuboff; Yanis Varoufakis Zuboff – Surveillance capitalism talk Varoufakis – Techno-feudalism lecture
43 AI Geopolitics AI capability determines global power Nick Bostrom; Demis Hassabis; Yoshua Bengio Bostrom – Superintelligence talk Bengio – AI governance lecture
44 Space Geopolitics Orbital infrastructure becomes strategic Everett Dolman; Peter Garretson; Joan Johnson-Freese Dolman – Astropolitics lecture Garretson – Space power talk
45 Corporate Geopolitics Multinationals rival states Susan Strange; Ian Bremmer; Parag Khanna Strange – Structural power lecture Bremmer – Global political risk talk
46 Techno-Feudalism Platforms replace traditional capitalism Yanis Varoufakis; Shoshana Zuboff; Nick Srnicek Varoufakis – Techno-feudalism talk Zuboff – Surveillance capitalism lecture
47 Post-National Governance Nation states weaken over time Ulrich Beck; Jürgen Habermas; David Held Habermas – Postnational constellation talk Held – Global governance lecture
48 Cosmopolitan Globalism Humanity transcends nation states Kwame Anthony Appiah; Martha Nussbaum; Ulrich Beck Appiah – Cosmopolitanism lecture Nussbaum – Global justice talk
49 Planetary Civilization Human civilization becomes planetary Carl Sagan; Freeman Dyson; Kim Stanley Robinson Sagan – Pale blue dot lecture Robinson – Future of civilization talk
50 Collapse Theory Civilizations collapse from complexity Joseph Tainter; Jared Diamond; Peter Turchin Tainter – Collapse lecture Diamond – Collapse talk

Geopolitical Thinker Map Relative to Open Source Ecology

Alignment Level Category Thinkers Core Assumption About Civilization Compatibility with OSE
Very High Commons & Collaborative Civilization Elinor Ostrom; Buckminster Fuller; Michel Bauwens; David Bollier Civilization can organize through cooperative governance of shared systems Extremely aligned – same philosophical foundation
Very High Open Technology / Distributed Production Neil Gershenfeld; Eric von Hippel; Adrian Bowyer Innovation emerges from open collaborative engineering ecosystems Directly aligned with OSE open hardware model
High Ecological Civilization Herman Daly; Kate Raworth; Donella Meadows Economy must operate within planetary ecological boundaries Strong alignment with regenerative infrastructure goals
High Infrastructure Civilization Parag Khanna; Bent Flyvbjerg; Deborah Cowen Infrastructure networks shape global development Aligned with OSE infrastructure-first civilization strategy
High Technological Abundance Buckminster Fuller; Peter Diamandis; Ray Kurzweil Technology can eliminate material scarcity Compatible with OSE post-scarcity industrial systems
Moderate Complex Systems & Resilience Nassim Taleb; Geoffrey West; Yaneer Bar-Yam Societies behave as complex adaptive systems Useful analytical framework for distributed civilization
Moderate Institutional Liberalism Joseph Nye; Robert Keohane; Anne-Marie Slaughter Institutions and cooperation reduce conflict Partial alignment but still state-centric
Moderate Geoeconomics Edward Luttwak; Ian Bremmer; Robert Blackwill Economic leverage drives geopolitical power Compatible analytically but assumes competitive states
Moderate Technological Geopolitics Vaclav Smil; Mariana Mazzucato; Carlota Perez Industrial and technological capacity shapes global order Compatible with OSE industrial development goals
Neutral Geographic Determinism Halford Mackinder; Nicholas Spykman; Robert Kaplan Geography strongly constrains political power Descriptive but not aligned with cooperative paradigm
Neutral Demographic Geopolitics Peter Zeihan; Nicholas Eberstadt; Jack Goldstone Population structure drives geopolitical change Informational but not philosophical alignment
Neutral World-Systems Theory Immanuel Wallerstein; Giovanni Arrighi; Samir Amin Global capitalist hierarchy structures world economy Critical analysis but not solution-oriented
Low Realism Hans Morgenthau; John Mearsheimer; Stephen Walt States pursue power and survival in anarchic world Conflicts with OSE cooperative assumptions
Low Balance of Power Henry Kissinger; Hedley Bull; Kenneth Waltz Global stability arises from competing great powers Assumes permanent geopolitical competition
Low Civilizational Conflict Samuel Huntington; Bernard Lewis; Niall Ferguson Civilizations inevitably clash Opposite of collaborative civilization premise
Very Low Imperial Geopolitics Karl Haushofer; Alfred Thayer Mahan; Halford Mackinder Power derives from territorial and military expansion Fundamentally incompatible with open civilization
Very Low Authoritarian Strategic Thought Alexander Dugin; Carl Schmitt; Leo Strauss (strategic interpretations) Civilization organized through centralized power Opposes decentralized collaborative governance

Peter Zeihan

Peter Zeihan is raw and humble, much wrong on feasibility of flexible fabrication and distributed enterprise. Centralist. But definitely idealistic? General critique of globalists is that they are formed by existing conditions, and therefore Divergent Thinking is not likely part of their game.

Other thinkers acc to Gemini:

Peter Zeihan is known for his distinctive approach to geopolitics, which heavily emphasizes demographics, geography, and resource availability. When looking for similar thinkers, it's helpful to consider those who share aspects of his analytical style. Here are some individuals and categories of thinkers who have similarities:

Individuals:

George Friedman: Zeihan worked for Friedman at Stratfor, a geopolitical intelligence firm. Friedman also focuses on long-term geopolitical trends and makes forecasts based on geographical and historical factors. Ian Bremmer: Bremmer, the president of Eurasia Group, analyzes political risk and global trends. He provides insights into how political factors influence economic and social developments. Parag Khanna: Khanna focuses on global connectivity, infrastructure, and the shifting power dynamics of nations. He pays close attention to how logistical and technological changes are reshaping the world. John J. Mearsheimer: Mearsheimer is a prominent realist scholar who emphasizes the role of power and competition in international relations. While his approach differs in some ways from Zeihan's, they both focus on the underlying structural forces that shape global events.

Realists

These seem to be in general realist asshats below. The fault of the realist camp seems to be first principle.grounding on scarcity, which is asshattish because scarcity does not stand, on first principles. There is only artificial scarcity, which changes with mindsets. Thus the primary work.of modern civ should focus on changing mindsets - that is the challenge. Nobodybsaid it would be easy.

Alexander Wendt (famous for contribution towards Constructivism)

Barry Buzan (famous for contribution towards Copenhagen School/Securitisation Theory)

James Fearon (famous for contribution towards Rationalism)

John J. Mearsheimer (famous for contribution towards Neorealism)

Joseph S. Nye Jr. (considered cofounder of Neoliberalism)

Kenneth Waltz (considered founder of Neorealism)

Martha Finnemore (famous for contribution towards Constructivism)

Robert O. Keohane (considered cofounder of Neoliberalism)

Samuel P. Huntington (famous for being the most controversial person in IR and for a certain book)

Stephen M. Walt (famous for contribution towards Neorealism)