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Living with a Reluctant Hegemon - Explaining European Responses to US Unilateralism (Hardcover, New)
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Living with a Reluctant Hegemon - Explaining European Responses to US Unilateralism (Hardcover, New)
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Living with a Reluctant Hegemon addresses a striking puzzle in
contemporary world politics: why have European states responded in
varying ways to recent unilateralist tendencies in US foreign
policy? The United States played a hegemonic leadership role in
building the post-war multilateral order but has been reluctant to
embrace many recent multilateral treaty initiatives championed by
its traditional European allies, such as the Kyoto Protocol on
climate change, the International Criminal Court, or the
verification protocol to the Biological Weapons Convention.
European responses to US objections, however, have varied across
these different transatlantic controversies. In some cases,
European decision-makers watered down or abandoned contested
treaties, whereas in other disputes, they opted for regime-building
excluding the US, that is, for a strategy of non-hegemonic
cooperation.
How Europeans choose to deal with the 'reluctant hegemon' has
critical implications for how key global challenges are
addressed--and yet, the striking variation of their responses has
been largely overlooked in a scholarly debate fixated on
understanding US unilateralism. Living with a Reluctant Hegemon
fills this important gap by studying European strategic choices in
five recent transatlantic conflicts over multilateral agreements.
It argues that neither realist accounts of global power dynamics
nor rational institutionalist models of cooperation can fully
explain why Europeans opt for non-hegemonic cooperation in some
cases but not others. To resolve this puzzle, we need to combine
rationalist propositions with constructivist insights about
normative constraints on states' institutional choices. By
developing such an integrated model, the book sheds new light on
the long-standing theoretical debate about the relationship between
hegemony and international cooperation.
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