The global compact that supported the postwar order is fraying. The institutions that gave it life – the UN, the WTO — are struggling to serve a multipolar world. In this vacuum, agility replaces architecture. The world is being rewired — through mineral corridors, maritime linkages, and digital highways. South-South solidarities and new plurilateralisms are displacing old frameworks, creating flexible, interest-driven coalitions to shape global governance where consensus has stalled.
This pillar examines the connective tissue of the emerging order. India’s recalibration — from BRICS to IMEC to the UFI trilateral — underscores a new strategic grammar. The Global South is no longer a constituency, it is a coalition, a force multiplier for a fairer order. In this fluid landscape, India is not a balancing but a builder, creating new structures for leadership, resilience, and shared growth.