Originally published in English in 1992, the book expanded on an essay Fukuyama wrote in 1989 titled "The End of History?" Fukuyama argued that the end of the Cold War and the collapse of the Soviet Union signaled not just the end of a geopolitical conflict, but the endpoint of ideological evolution.
Fukuyama, building on Hegel’s philosophy (via Alexandre Kojève), argues that human history, understood as the evolution of political and economic systems, has reached its . That endpoint is not a series of events stopping, but the universalization of Western liberal democracy and capitalist markets. “History” in this sense means the struggle over which form of government and social organization is most legitimate. With the fall of the Berlin Wall (1989), he claims liberal democracy has no viable ideological rival left. frensis fukuyama kraj istorije i poslednji covek pdf 17
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