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Chapter 21: Great powers

Chapter 21: Great powers

pp. 309-325

Authors

, Professor of International Relations in the Paul H. Nitze School of Advanced International Studies
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Summary

Introduction

One of the fundamental characteristics of any international system is the distribution of power among states. The sheer fact that states are unequal in terms of power entails a number of important implications for international politics. For example, while the desires and concerns of weak states are often neglected, the demands of strong states usually shape the international agenda; relations among strong states, in turn, significantly affect patterns of international stability, order and change. In short, if you want to shed light on some basic dynamics of international affairs, for analytical or practical purposes, always ask yourself a set of very simple questions: How is power distributed among states? Which are the strong states? How do they stand in relation to each other? Although the relationship of forces is by no means the only explanatory variable at play, it frequently goes a long way in accounting for who gets what, when and how on the international stage.

What we have generically called ‘strong states’ are often referred to as great powers. At first sight, the definition of ‘great power’ seems unproblematic. After all, do we not know who the great powers are today? And do we not know who the great powers were in, say, the nineteenth century? Do we not recognise a great power when we see one? Yet if we look closer and try to come up with a working definition, things immediately get more complicated. The next section of this chapter will therefore focus on the attributes of a great power, on the elements – or the combination of elements – that allow us to tell a great power from other states. Such a conceptual effort will be followed by a brief historical regression intended to show the role played by the great powers in the modern and contemporary international systems. Next we will examine the main theories of International Relations (IR) that claim to explain broad patterns of cooperation and conflict between great powers. Some emphasise the special functions that great powers perform; some rely on the number of the existing great powers; some identify in the rise and decline of the great powers the basic force behind international change. The last section will assess the relevance of the established knowledge for the post-Cold War international system.

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