Will global power transitions be peaceful or bloody? This question frequently comes to the fore as to the consequences of the possible power transition between China and the USA. The Struggle for Recognition in International Relations: Status, Revisionism, and Rising Powers provides both a theoretical and empirical framework based on the ‘struggle for recognition’ to understand the social dynamics of power transitions. Michelle Murray examines the rise of the United States and Germany against Britain at the end of the 19th century. Using these examples, Murray questions why some power transitions occurred peacefully and others ended in conflict. While Murray brings together status studies and power transition theory within the framework of ...
The dissertation addresses the core IR problem of revisionism and relates it to both the declining s...
This paper considers the historical relationship between states, markets and power by examining thre...
This article argues that the normative promise of recognition theory in International Relations has ...
For those immersed in grand International Relations (IR) theory couched in the structural/ functiona...
In Power Shift: On the New Global Order, Richard Falk examines the challenges and changes to global ...
Review of a monograph: Guy Fiti Sinclair. To Reform the World: International Organizations and the M...
This literature review provides a comparative analysis of the four main approaches within the status...
Worldviews of Aspiring Powers considers domestic foreign policy debates in five emerging influential...
At the beginning of the third chapter of this book, Lal makes reference to the political historian, ...
describes the concept of sovereignty as a ‘bothersome concept ’ (1979: 95). While there is indeed ha...
In his book Humanitarian Intervention and Legitimacy Wars: Seeking Peace and Justice in the 21st Cen...
In Rethinking the New World Order, Georg Sørensen explores timely questions regarding the nature of ...
In Dynamics among Nations, Hilton Root looks at the waning influence of the West’s policy of liberal...
After summarizing the main points of Kagan’s book, the review responds to Kagan’s perception of powe...
textWhy do some shifts in power between states pass off peacefully while others result in conflict? ...
The dissertation addresses the core IR problem of revisionism and relates it to both the declining s...
This paper considers the historical relationship between states, markets and power by examining thre...
This article argues that the normative promise of recognition theory in International Relations has ...
For those immersed in grand International Relations (IR) theory couched in the structural/ functiona...
In Power Shift: On the New Global Order, Richard Falk examines the challenges and changes to global ...
Review of a monograph: Guy Fiti Sinclair. To Reform the World: International Organizations and the M...
This literature review provides a comparative analysis of the four main approaches within the status...
Worldviews of Aspiring Powers considers domestic foreign policy debates in five emerging influential...
At the beginning of the third chapter of this book, Lal makes reference to the political historian, ...
describes the concept of sovereignty as a ‘bothersome concept ’ (1979: 95). While there is indeed ha...
In his book Humanitarian Intervention and Legitimacy Wars: Seeking Peace and Justice in the 21st Cen...
In Rethinking the New World Order, Georg Sørensen explores timely questions regarding the nature of ...
In Dynamics among Nations, Hilton Root looks at the waning influence of the West’s policy of liberal...
After summarizing the main points of Kagan’s book, the review responds to Kagan’s perception of powe...
textWhy do some shifts in power between states pass off peacefully while others result in conflict? ...
The dissertation addresses the core IR problem of revisionism and relates it to both the declining s...
This paper considers the historical relationship between states, markets and power by examining thre...
This article argues that the normative promise of recognition theory in International Relations has ...