Unipolarity and World Politics

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A01=Birthe Hansen
Alliance Formation
Asymmetric Alliances
Asymmetrical Alignment
Asymmetrical Balancing
Author_Birthe Hansen
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global power dynamics
Hansen 2000a
international
international relations theory
Lone Superpower
NATO Support
NATO's Front Line
NATO’s Front Line
Neorealist Theory
non-great
Non-great Powers
nuclear proliferation
Nuclear Weapons
order
Political Competence
post-Cold War era
postCold War
power
powers
security studies
single
Single Superpower
state behaviour analysis
super
superpower
Superpower's Incentive
Superpower's Position
Superpower’s Incentive
Superpower’s Position
system
Time NATO
UN
Unipolar International System
unipolar international system framework
Unipolar Structure
Unipolar System
Unipolar World Order
United States
Vice Versa
World Order Project

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415478205
  • Weight: 460g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 14 Dec 2010
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This new book offers a coherent model of a unipolar world order.

Unipolarity is usually described either as a ‘brief moment’ or as something historically insignificant. However, we have already seen nearly twenty years of virtual unipolarity and this period has been of great significance for world politics.

Two issues have been crucial since the end of the Cold War: How to theorize the distinctiveness and exceptional character of a unipolar international system? And what is it like to conduct state business in a unipolar world? Until now, a comprehensive model for unipolarity has been lacking. This volume provides a theoretical framework for analysis of the current world order and identifies the patterns of outcomes and systematic variations to be expected. Terrorism and attempts by small states to achieve a nuclear capability are not new phenomena or exclusive to the current world order, but in the case of unipolarity these have become attached to the fear of marginalization and the struggle against a powerful centre without the possibility of allying with an alternative superpower.

Supplying a coherent theoretical model for unipolarity, which can provide explanations of trends and patterns in the turbulent post-Cold War era, this book will be of interest to students of IR theory, international security and foreign policy.

Birthe Hansen is an Associate Professor at the Department of Political Science, University of Copenhagen.

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