Empires, Nation-States, and Democracies

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A01=Gerard Roland
Appeasement
Austro hungarian empire
Author_Gerard Roland
Autocratic
Autocratic regime
Borders countries
Capital levy
Category=JPB
Category=JPS
Category=JPSL
Category=KCZ
Chinese empire
Chinese leaders
Colonial
Colonial powers
Communist
Communist party
Communist regime
Comparative analysis
Democratic backsliding
Dominant
Dominant ethnic
Economic development
Empires
eq_bestseller
eq_business-finance-law
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Ethnic
Ethnic groups
Ethnically homogeneous
Expansionism
Foreign investment
forthcoming
Groups
Hitler
Homogeneity
Human rights
Hungarian
Ideology
Illiberal democracy
Immigration
Imperial expansion
Imperialism
Imperialist
Imperialist ambitions
Imperialist powers
Independence
Institutional systems
Keynote lecture
Kyivan rus
Labor force
Mediterranean
Military power
Minorities
Monroe doctrine
Nation
Nationalist
Nationalist forces
Nationalist ideology
Nazi
Orban
Ottoman
Ottoman empire
Putin
Redistributive taxation
Roman empire
Russia invasion
Russian empire
Secession
Secessionist tendencies
Sino centric
Soviet
Soviet empire
Soviet republics
Sub saharan
Suffrage
Trump
Universal suffrage
Universalistic

Product details

  • ISBN 9780691284712
  • Dimensions: 140 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 11 Aug 2026
  • Publisher: Princeton University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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How the geopolitical behavior of states is closely related to the nature of their political systems

Today’s world is characterized by an unstable coexistence of empires, nation-states, and democracies. In this book, Gerard Roland examines these three fundamentally different institutional systems and considers whether the international behavior of nations is influenced by the nature of their political regimes. He explains that until the nineteenth century, international relations were driven by rivalries among competing empires; as empires started to disintegrate, they were replaced by nation-states, some of which became democracies. The nation-state project supported by today’s extreme right promotes ethnic homogeneity within a country’s borders, while democracies are based on universal values of citizenship. Interactions between countries with such essentially different political systems, Roland shows, are seldom harmonious and likely to evolve into cultural clashes and military conflict.

Drawing on his expertise in political and comparative economics, Roland analyzes why and how countries’ geopolitical behavior—their actions and attitudes regarding war, peace, expansionism, and trade—is closely linked to their political systems. In the long run, he argues, the ethnically homogenous nation-state is doomed because of the strong economic inefficiencies entailed by economic nationalism and the lack of openness to immigration, trade, and foreign direct investment. A better path for the future of the international order, Roland suggests, would be a world of small democracies building supranational institutions on the basis of commonly accepted rules.

Gerard Roland is the E. Morris Cox distinguished emeritus professor of economics and professor of political science at the University of California, Berkeley. He is the author of Development Economics and Transition and Economics and the coauthor of Democratic Politics in the European Parliament.

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