Abstract
<jats:p>The article examines the role of global economic networks in the transformation of international economic relations in the context of intensifying international conflicts and geoeconomic competition. The relevance of the study is determined by growing geopolitical tensions, the increasing number of regional conflicts, the expansion of sanctions regimes, and the restructuring of global supply chains, which reshape the architecture of international economic relations. Under these conditions, international economic interaction is defined not only by traditional trade and investment relations but also by complex network structures of the global economy.In this context, the concept of connectography enables the global economy to be analyzed as a system of economic networks that create mechanisms of interaction and dependence among states, corporations, and regions. Such an approach provides a broader theoretical perspective for explaining the transformation of international economic relations in a period marked by intensifying competition and conflicts.The aim of the article is to analyze the influence of global economic networks on the development and transformation of international economic relations in the context of contemporary international conflicts using a connectographic approach. The study examines the functioning of global trade, investment, and technological networks and their role in shaping models of economic interaction among countries. Particular attention is paid to the impact of economic interdependence on international competition, the use of economic instruments in conflict environments, and the transformation of global value chains.The results demonstrate that global economic networks function as mechanisms of global economic integration and as instruments of geoeconomic influence. Strengthening economic interdependence is accompanied by the growing use of trade restrictions, sanctions, technological barriers, and economic security policies as tools of international competition. Contemporary international economic relations are characterized by fragmentation of the global economy, redistribution of economic ties, and emergence of new network configurations of global interaction.</jats:p>