Astana. Photo credit: Shutterstock.
Kazakhstan’s Astana International Forum (AIF) has quietly entered a new phase in its development. Set to convene again this month, it began in 2008 as a targeted economic forum. Over time it has gradually evolved into a broader diplomatic platform aspiring to serve the so-called “Global South” as a whole.
The AIF seeks to offer a deliberately open space for structured yet flexible dialogue across economic, political, and security domains, in a world full of international gatherings either overdetermined by legacy institutions or narrowly focused on crisis response, The Caspian Post reports citing The Times of Central Asia.
The AIF does not model itself on any existing institution. It is meant neither to replicate global summits nor to impose consensus, nor to replace regional blocs or legacy mechanisms. Rather, it reflects Kazakhstan’s own diplomatic philosophy - what President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev calls “multi-vector foreign policy” - seeking to extend this philosophy outward through a forum that prioritizes engagement over alignment and dialogue over doctrine.
The AIF’s early period, from 2008 through roughly 2015, was defined by foundational work. Then called the Astana Economic Forum, it brought together central bankers, financial policymakers, and development agencies. The scope was technocratic, focusing on macroeconomic modernization and public-sector reform. Even in this limited format, however, the initiative revealed Kazakhstan’s national aspiration to connect with wider global trends in institutional development and governance.
Those formative years correspond to what, in terms of complex-systems theory, might be called the Forum’s phase of “emergence”: a period of assembling functions, testing formats, and learning the rhythms of international convening. These years were not marked by geopolitical ambition, but they did set in motion a process of institutional self-recognition. Kazakhstan was not just hosting events; it was experimenting with a type of global presence that would grow more distinct in later years.
From 2015 to 2022, the Forum entered a more self-defining stage. It retained its core economic focus, but it increasingly attracted participants from beyond financial and development sectors. This broadened its scope to include questions of connectivity, regional stability, and sustainable development. The shift was not an accident. It accompanied Kazakhstan’s growing involvement in regional diplomacy and its active participation in a range of other multilateral structures.
During this second period, the Forum took on the character of an institution with internal momentum. (This is what complex-systems theorists might term “autopoiesis,” i.e., the ability of a system to reproduce and maintain itself.) By adapting to a wider field of participants and issues, the AIF began to articulate a mission no longer limited to showcasing Kazakhstan’s domestic reforms but extending toward the creation of new transnational linkages. The rebranding of the old Astana Economic Forum as the Astana International Forum affirmed this shift in mandate, scope, and ambition.
That rebranding marked the beginning of what now appears to be a critical inflection point. The cancellation of the 2024 edition due to catastrophic flooding created a rupture; but the organizers, rather than rush a replacement, deferred the Forum and used the intervening time to clarify its structure and message. The thematic architecture of the 2025 edition has been streamlined, reducing four policy tracks to three: Foreign Policy and International Security, Energy and Climate Change, and Economy and Finance.
The AIF shares thematic ground with other Global South initiatives, but its structural logic differs. Probably the UN-led South-South Cooperation Forum (SSCF) has the most in common with it. Like the AIF, the SSCF functions as a coordination mechanism for development partnerships; however, it is embedded within multilateral architecture and guided by established institutional mandates. It also differs from the AIF through its emphasis on technical capacity-building and policy harmonization.
By contrast, the AIF is not development-focused and not multilateral in the traditional sense. It does not implement frameworks; rather, it constructs spaces wherein frameworks may emerge. It is not procedural like the SSCF, but instead diplomatic. It is driven less by an operational agenda than by the search to prototype new modes of cross-regional engagement. One may say that whereas the SSCF presumes a normative grammar rooted in shared postcolonial trajectories, the AIF seeks instead to write a new syntax of cooperation for a fragmenting international order. It is, in this sense, not a derivative platform but a generative one.
The new reconfiguration of the AIF’s agenda is more than logistical. It signals a willingness to redesign the Forum’s internal logic in response to changing global conditions. Its 2025 vision statement explicitly acknowledges the current global environment as one of “unprecedented complexity,” calling for actionable collaboration that “transcends borders and sectors.” The AIF has thus begun to address the demands for “organizational antifragility,” the threshold phase where any institution must reconfigure and reorient itself for new tasks and new relevance, or else risk stagnation.
The Forum’s new mission leans into that challenge with pragmatic optimism. It describes itself as a space where “vision meets action,” aiming to “reignite multilateralism” and to catalyze a movement toward “future-focused” solutions. The AIF’s expanded topical scope now includes climate action, technological innovation, sustainable development, and supply-chain resilience. These adjustments reflect the growing confidence of Kazakhstan’s foreign policy, which sees in the Forum not only a convening tool but a projection of national strategy into a shared international format.
To say that the AIF is not the World Economic Forum (WEF) is not to denigrate it. Such a comparison would simply miss the point. The WEF seeks mainly to reinforce global economic consensus and convene elite stakeholders from advanced industrialized systems. The AIF, by contrast, is a diplomatic instrument shaped by a mid-sized country offering a venue that intentionally includes underrepresented states and perspectives. It does not aim to replace existing institutions but to complement them with a platform more attuned to the network-distributed complexities of the contemporary world.
The AIF’s distinctiveness lies in its state-led but non-hegemonic structure. It is both sovereign and collaborative, national in origin but multilateral in aspiration. This is why it resonates with parts of the Global South that find few opportunities for serious, non-aligned dialogue across sectoral and ideological lines. Kazakhstan’s ambition with the AIF is to create a reliable convening node for political, business, and academic voices that otherwise lack a coherent shared venue.
What happens next depends not only on the Forum’s thematic continuity, but also on its institutional maturation. Will it develop memory, procedures, and expectations that persist beyond annual meetings? Will it build partnerships that last across cycles of participation? Will it decide to convene only every other year and, if so, how will it use the intervening year to prepare outcomes and strengthen effectiveness? If Kazakhstan succeeds in making the AIF more durable in these respects, it may well enter a new phase of evolution, in which Kazakhstan adds to its diplomatic profile the capacity to design international norms.
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