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The Monkey Cage
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"The Monkey Cage
Democracy is the art of running the circus from the monkey cage. - H.L. Mencken
January 08, 2009
Unipolarity is what states make of it
Justin Logan and Matt Yglesias ask a question.
American policymakers have tended to expansionism, to recklessness, and to grand strategies based on trying to dominate the world. A (hopefully) interesting theoretical question I’m kicking around is, Under unipolarity, what constraints are acting, given that structure really isn’t, and is there any reason to believe that any of these constraints will start limiting American strategic options any time soon? If there are no binding constraints in sight, aren’t we very likely (destined?) to continue with the primacy strategy we’ve followed more or less since 1991?
And GWU faculty (or, more specificaly, Marty Finnemore) already have an answer. Marty has a piece (behind paywall) in the new issue of World Politics 1 entitled ‘Legitimacy, Hypocrisy, and the Social Structure of Unipolarity: Why Being a Unipole Isn’t All It’s Cracked Up to Be’ that touches exactly on this topic. Her opening sentences:
One would think that unipoles have it made. After all, unipolarity is a condition of minimum constraint. Unipoles should be able to do pretty much what they want in the world since, by definition, no other state has the power to stop them. In fact, however, the United States, arguably the closest thing to a unipole we have seen in centuries has been frustrated in many of its policies since it achieved t"
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