Polarity in international relations : past, present, future
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Polarity in international relations : past, present, future
(Governance, security and development / series editor, Trine Flockhart)
Palgrave Macmillan, c2022
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Note
Other editors: Bertel Heurlin, Ole Wæver, Anders Wivel
Includes bibliographical references and index
"Chapter 17 is available open access under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License via link.springer.com."--Back cover
Description and Table of Contents
Description
This book brings together a group of leading scholars on international relations to develop and apply the concept of polarity on past and present international relations and discuss its applicability and usefulness in the future. Despite a comprehensive debate on a global power shift, often discussed in terms of the decline of the United States, the crisis in the liberal international order, and the rise of China, IRs main concept of power, 'polarity', remains undertheorized and understudied. The great powers and their importance for dynamics and processes in the international system are central to current debates on international order, but these debates too often suffer from a combination of politicized empirical analysis and reliance on old theoretical debates and conceptualizations, typically originating in the Cold War security environment. In order to meet these challenges, this book updates, conceptualizes, applies and critically debates the concepts of unipolarity, bipolarity, multipolarity and non-polarity in order to understand the current world order.
Table of Contents
I. Introduction: Understanding polarity in theory and history, description of the content of sections and chapters. (Bertel Heurlin, Nina Graeger, Ole Waever, Anders Wivel)
II. Polarity in the liberal international order (Charles Kupchan, Robert Lieber, Peter Kurrild Klitgaard, Andre Ken Jakobsen, Rasmus Gjedsso Bertelsen)
III. Polarity and the US-China problematique (Camilla Sorensen, Anders Forsby, Bertel Heurlin)
IV. Polarity, institutions and domestic politics (Jennifer Sterling-Folker, Eliza Gheorghe, Stuart Kaufman, Barbara Kunz)
V. Polarity and foreign policy (Kai He, Hans Mouritzen, Anders Wivel and Revecca Pedi, Henrik Larsen)
VI. Contextualizing polarity (Oystein Tunsjo, Peter Toft, Sten Rynning, Carsten Jensen, Georg Sorensen)
VII. The future of polarity (William Wohlforth, Randall Schweller)
VIII. Conclusion (Bertel Heurlin, Nina Graeger, Ole Waever, Anders Wivel)
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