Can international legitimacy operate even in a deformed balance of
power, and when there is only one dominant state? Conventionally,
hegemony has been perceived as a threat to international society. But
how then is international order to be maintained, if this still
requires a managerial role on the part of the great powers? IR theory
has not taken that problem sufficiently seriously. This study makes a
sharp distinction between primacy, denoting merely a form of material
power, and hegemony, understood as a legitimate practice, and as
giving rise to a form of social power. Adopting an English School
approach, the author suggests hegemony be considered as one potential
institution of international society, and hence as one possible
mechanism of international order. The book reviews some relevant
historical cases (the Concert of Europe, Pax Britannica and Pax
Americana) and argues that, instead of one model of hegemony, these
represent several different variants: importantly, each displays its
own distinctive legitimacy dynamics. Once these are appreciated, they
can help us identify the possible institutional forms of hegemony in
contemporary international society. This is done through three cases,
examining in turn US policy on the UN Security Council, in East Asia,
and on climate change. The overall argument challenges the limited
post-Cold War debate about primacy, and the equally simplistic
projections about the future distribution of power to which it gives
rise. In doing so, it offers a major re-thinking of the concept of
hegemony in international relations.
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780191618451
Publisert
2020
Utgiver
Vendor
OUP Oxford
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter