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El. knyga: Coping with Geopolitical Decline: The United States in European Perspective

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As the US challenges the liberal international order, fights back China's ascendency, and reconsiders its traditional alliances, this book analyses key lessons from Europe's experience and provides comparative insight into the likely dynamics of cooperation and conflict in the 21st century.


How great powers react to their inevitable decline shapes their own destiny as well as the course of international politics. Leaders can decide to engage with others or isolate themselves; to build alliances or initiate war; to stoke up nationalism or invest in innovation; to focus on economic competition or develop their people's soft power. While some of these coping strategies foster cooperation, others provoke conflict with neighbours. In Coping with Geopolitical Decline leading political scientists, historians, and sociologists explore the strategies adopted by leaders and domestic elites to prevent, reverse, or deny the decline of their country. Analyzing four European cases (Byzantium, England, France, Russia) before turning to the contemporary debate in the United States, they argue that geopolitics is not fate. Coping strategies depend on the context, which includes cultural representations of decline, the experience of military defeat, and domestic politics. Whether elites choose to modernize their economy, bolster their diplomatic status, or launch preventive war makes a difference in the extent and speed of a country's decline. By the same token, coping strategies affect world order. A well-managed decline allows for a peaceful power transition. Some strategies, however, may preserve the peace at the expense of a country's standing, while others will stave off decline but encourage imperialist adventures or precipitate military conflicts. As the United States challenges the liberal international order, fights back China's ascendency, and reconsiders its traditional alliances, Coping with Geopolitical Decline analyzes key lessons from Europe's experience and provides comparative insight into the likely dynamics of cooperation and conflict in the twenty-first century.

Recenzijos

"Coping with Geopolitical decline offers an original, significant, indeed essential contribution to recent debates in the field of historical sociology which have underlined the importance of integrating agency and the mesosociological level into a field long dominated by macrosociological approaches." Frédérick Guillaume Dufour, UQAM "Coping with Geopolitical Decline is a terrific book. This is a subject that has not been fully explored, and it is marvellous that it is covered here in such an original way, with really interesting historical cases that produce conceptual innovation." John Anthony Hall, McGill University and co-author of The Paradox of Vulnerability: States, Nationalism, and the Financial Crisis

Daugiau informacijos

How great powers, from Byzantium to the United States, have reacted to their inevitable decline - and with what consequences.
Tables and Figures
ix
Acknowledgments xi
Introduction: Coping with Geopolitical Decline 3(20)
Frederic Merand
1 What Is Decline?
23(30)
Jonathan Sachs
PART ONE THE EUROPEAN EXPERIENCE
2 The Culture of Decline in Later Byzantium
53(24)
Cecily Hilsdale
3 Defeat and Decline: Understanding Military Failure in Victorian Britain and in America after Vietnam and Iraq
77(30)
Richard Lachmann
4 Decline in Denial: France since 1945
107(20)
Olivier Schmitt
5 Resisting Decline: Russia, the West, and Eurasia
127(36)
Virginie Lasnier
Segkin Kostem
PART TWO COPING WITH AMERICAN DECLINE
6 American Decline and Performative War, or How to Do Things with Force
163(31)
Julian Go
7 Adjusting to Rise and Coping with Decline: The China-US Relationship in Historical and Theoretical Context
194(28)
Joshua R. Itzkowitz Shifrinson
8 American Decline, Liberal Hegemony, and the Transformation of World Politics
222(29)
G. John Ikenberry
Conclusion: European Lessons for America 251(14)
Frederic Merand
Contributors 265(2)
Index 267
Frédéric Mérand is professor of political science and director of the Centre for International Studies at Université de Montréal, CÉRIUM.