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Post20thcentury

Post20thcentury refers to the period roughly after the end of the 20th century, used by scholars to discuss trends and transformations that characterize the 21st century and later. It is not an officially codified era but a descriptive label for continued changes across politics, technology, society, and culture.

While the term is broad, common emphases include the digital revolution and the information age, globalization

Economically, many regions have shifted toward service-based and knowledge-intensive industries, with rising concerns about inequality, employment

Scholars debate the usefulness of the term, noting its vagueness and overlap with the 21st century. Some

tempered
by
regional
powers,
climate
change
and
sustainability,
demographic
shifts,
and
evolving
forms
of
governance
and
civil
society.
The
period
has
seen
rapid
technological
advances
in
computing,
communication,
biotechnology,
and
energy.
disruption
from
automation,
and
new
financial
architectures.
Politically,
power
has
become
more
multipolar,
with
China
and
other
actors
shaping
global
norms;
conflicts
have
shifted
toward
cyber
and
information
domains
as
well
as
traditional
theatres.
Societal
life
has
been
transformed
by
social
media,
shifting
cultural
production,
and
movements
for
rights
and
representation.
The
COVID-19
pandemic
is
often
cited
as
a
watershed
moment
highlighting
interdependence
and
resilience.
prefer
more
specific
periodizations
focused
on
decades
or
on
established
frameworks
such
as
the
Information
Age,
postmodernism,
or
the
Anthropocene.
Nevertheless,
post20thcentury
continues
to
function
as
a
shorthand
for
analyzing
continued
continuity
and
change
beyond
the
conventional
20th-century
frame.