The next thirty years will determine which nations survive-and which quietly collapse.Human history has always been shaped by crisis, but the coming decades represent something fundamentally different. The world is no longer moving from one crisis to another; it is entering an era where crises overlap, compound, and persist. Climate disruption, artificial intelligence, demographic decline, economic volatility, political polarization, technological concentration of power, and institutional erosion are no longer future risks. They are present realities reshaping the foundations of nation-states.Survive or Collapse: How Nations Can Prepare for the Next 30 Years is a forward-looking, solution-oriented book that confronts this new reality directly. It does not merely describe what is going wrong with the world. Instead, it asks a more urgent question: What must nations do to endure an age of permanent uncertainty?In contrast to books that focus on fear, apocalypse, or ideological blame, this work is grounded in strategic realism and policy logic. It argues that survival in the 21st century will not be determined solely by military strength, economic size, or technological dominance. Many wealthy and powerful nations, history shows, have collapsed despite possessing all three. The real determinants of survival lie elsewhere-in national resilience, education as security, social trust, institutional strength, and long-term governance.A World Beyond StabilityThe international system that emerged after the Second World War was built on predictability: stable alliances, expanding trade, demographic growth, and faith in progress. That system is now fragmenting. Geopolitical rivalries are intensifying, globalization is reversing into strategic fragmentation, and multilateral institutions are struggling to remain relevant. At the same time, internal pressures within nations-aging populations, youth unemployment, inequality, misinformation, and identity polarization-are weakening social cohesion from within.This book argues that the greatest threat to nations today is not external invasion but internal unpreparedness. States designed for a stable world are being forced to operate in an unstable one. Governance systems optimized for short election cycles are being overwhelmed by long-term risks that demand continuity, foresight, and institutional memory.National Resilience as the New Grand StrategyAt the core of this book is a powerful idea: national resilience must become the central objective of governance.National resilience is not simply the ability to recover from shocks. It is the capacity of a society to absorb disruption, adapt to change, maintain legitimacy, and continue functioning under stress-economic, environmental, technological, and political. Resilient nations bend without breaking. Fragile nations fracture even in times of relative peace.Through historical analysis, policy reasoning, and comparative insight, the book demonstrates why resilience consistently outperforms raw power. It explains why nations with moderate resources but strong institutions often endure longer than those with vast wealth but weak social trust. It shows how resilience must be embedded across education systems, economies, public administration, and civic culture.Education as National SecurityOne of the book's most critical arguments is that education is no longer a social sector-it is a security sector.In an era defined by automation, artificial intelligence, misinformation, and ideological polarization, the survival of nations depends on the cognitive and moral capacities of their citizens. Education systems that train students only for narrow employment outcomes are failing. What is required instead are systems that develop critical thinking, adaptability, civic responsibility, and lifelong learning.