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Great Powers and International Hierarchy

Autor Daniel McCormack
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 29 aug 2018
Hierarchical relationships—rules that structure both international and domestic politics—are pervasive. Yet we know little about how these relationships are constructed, maintained, and dismantled. This book fills this lacuna through a two-pronged research approach: first, it discusses how great power negotiations over international political settlements both respond to domestic politics within weak states and structure the specific forms that hierarchy takes. Second, it deduces three sets of hypotheses about hierarchy maintenance, construction, and collapse during the post-war era. By offering a coherent theoretical model of hierarchical politics within weaker states, the author is able to answer a number of important questions, including: Why does the United States often ally with autocratic states even though its most enduring relationships are with democracies? Why do autocratic hierarchical relationships require interstate coercion? Why do some hierarchies end violently and otherspeacefully? Why does hierarchical competition sometimes lead to interstate conflict and sometimes to civil conflict?
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9783319939759
ISBN-10: 3319939750
Pagini: 297
Ilustrații: XV, 246 p. 20 illus.
Dimensiuni: 148 x 210 x 26 mm
Greutate: 0.47 kg
Ediția:1st ed. 2019
Editura: Springer International Publishing
Colecția Palgrave Macmillan
Locul publicării:Cham, Switzerland

Cuprins

1. Introduction.- 2. Structural Analogies in International Relations.- 3. Hierarchy Throughout History.- 4. The Shifting Territorial Logic of Hierarchy.- 5. Maintaining Hierarchy.- 6. Extending Hierarchy.- 7. Eclipsing Hierarchy.- 8. Conclusion: Hierarchy and Political Violence in the International System.

Notă biografică

Daniel McCormack was Post-Doctoral Fellow at the University of Pennsylvania, USA. His current research focuses on political violence in America.

Textul de pe ultima copertă

Hierarchical relationships—rules that structure both international and domestic politics—are pervasive. Yet we know little about how these relationships are constructed, maintained, and dismantled. This book fills this lacuna through a two-pronged research approach: first, it discusses how great power negotiations over international political settlements both respond to domestic politics within weak states and structure the specific forms that hierarchy takes. Second, it deduces three sets of hypotheses about hierarchy maintenance, construction, and collapse during the post-war era. By offering a coherent theoretical model of hierarchical politics within weaker states, the author is able to answer a number of important questions, including: Why does the United States often ally with autocratic states even though its most enduring relationships are with democracies? Why do autocratic hierarchical relationships require interstate coercion? Why do some hierarchies end violently and others peacefully? Why does hierarchical competition sometimes lead to interstate conflict and sometimes to civil conflict?

Daniel McCormack was Post-Doctoral Fellow at the University of Pennsylvania, USA. His current research focuses on political violence in America.


Caracteristici

Demonstrates that domestic political outcomes are critically mediated by hierarchical institutions Reveals that the particular pattern of hierarchical institutions that emerges in a given time period is a function of a larger great power bargain Provides a framework for understanding hierarchical institutions that will guide research moving forward