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Modern View
SCHWELLER, RANDALL
(3)
answer(s).
Srl
Item
1
ID:
107432
Emerging powers in an age of disorder
/ Schweller, Randall
Schweller, Randall
Journal Article
0 Rating(s) & 0 Review(s)
Publication
2011.
Summary/Abstract
THE DRAMATIC RISE OF CHINA AND INDIA AMONG OTHERS HAS SET THE STAGE for a fundamental rethinking of world politics in an age of the waning dominance of US power as a force for remaking the world in its own image. While Pax Americana is not yet teetering on the edge of collapse, the consensus opinion is that the relative decline of the United States is probably irreversible and its unipolar moment will soon give way to something new. A “return to multipolarity” is one way of describing this shift. It tells us that several great powers will emerge to challenge US primacy. That is all. The more important question is: What sort of global order will emerge on the other side of the transition from unipolarity to multipolarity? Will it be one of peace and plenty or conflict and scarcity? On this issue, experts are divided into two camps, pessimists and optimists.
Key Words
World Politics
;
United States
;
China
;
India
;
Global Governance
;
Multipolar World
;
Emerging Power
;
Great Power Conflict
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2
ID:
158257
Opposite but compatible nationalisms: a neoclassical realist approach to the future of US–China relations
/ Schweller, Randall
Schweller, Randall
Journal Article
0 Rating(s) & 0 Review(s)
Summary/Abstract
China’s new assertiveness and the sudden inward turn of United States are a function of causes located in both the second and third images. The key second-image variable is nationalism, which combines with the power trajectories (a third-image variable) of both China and the United States to define how their relationship will unfold in the coming years. The interaction between nationalism and power trajectory produces entirely different foreign policy orientations in rising and declining powers—the former embraces an outward-looking, extroverted foreign policy of expansion, while the latter adopts an inward-looking, introverted foreign policy of restraint and retrenchment. The resurgent nationalisms of the rising challenger and the declining hegemon are entirely compatible with a future relationship characterized by peace and harmony. Obviously, the two nationalisms pose no inherent conflict of interests: China currently wants more global influence; the Unites States wants less. Hence, there is good reason to expect a soft landing as the world moves from unipolarity to bipolarity.
Key Words
US–China Relations
;
Compatible Nationalisms
;
Neoclassical Realist Approach
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3
ID:
162381
Three cheers for Trump's foreign policy : what the establishment misses
/ Schweller, Randall
Schweller, Randall
Journal Article
0 Rating(s) & 0 Review(s)
Key Words
Trump's Foreign Policy
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