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| Online-Ressource |
Verfasst von: | Beaumont, Paul [VerfasserIn]  |
Titel: | The grammar of status competition |
Titelzusatz: | international hierarchies and domestic politics |
Verf.angabe: | Paul David Beaumont |
Verlagsort: | New York, NY |
Verlag: | Oxford University Press |
Jahr: | 2024 |
Umfang: | 1 Online-Ressource |
Gesamttitel/Reihe: | Oxford scholarship online : Political Science |
Fussnoten: | Includes bibliographical references and index |
ISBN: | 978-0-19-777180-8 |
Abstract: | In The Grammar of Status Competition, Paul David Beaumont tackles the question of what status is and how to measure it in the field of international relations. Given states, statesmen, and citizens care about and pursue status despite its difficulty to assess, Beaumont argues that we can study international status hierarchies via states and citizens themselves who also grapple with this same status ambiguity. Advancing a new theoretical framework for investigating how theories of international status (TIS) inform policy making, this book will be useful to IR scholars and students looking to make sense of how states construct and compete in hierarchies of their own making. |
| "A burgeoning body of research has documented that states of all kinds exert considerable energy and even blood and treasure seeking status on the world stage. Yet, for all scholars' success in identifying instances of status seeking, they lack agreement on the nature of the international hierarchies states are said to compete within. The difficulty is twofold: international collective beliefs are unobservable meanwhile there are a multitude of plausible ways to assess status in any given policy field or international context. The book addresses these puzzles head on by making a strength out status' widely acknowledged slipperiness. The book redirects inquiry away from unobservable international status hierarchies and onto the theories of international status (TIS) that governments and citizens produce and use to make sense of their state's position in the world. Advancing a new theoretical framework for investigating how TIS inform policy making, book showcases its value via three deliberately different case studies: how rival TIS were instrumental in legitimating (1) Norwegian education reforms at the turn of the 21st century; (2) the United States negotiating positions during the Strategic Arms Limitation Talks, and (3) the prosecution of Britain's war with the Boer between 1899-1902. The book thereby provides answers to three major puzzles in IR status research: why states compete for status when the international rewards seem ephemeral; how states can escape zero-sum competitions for status; and how status scholars can disentangle status from other motivations"-- |
DOI: | doi:10.1093/9780197771808.001.0001 |
URL: | Volltext: https://doi.org/10.1093/9780197771808.001.0001 |
| DOI: https://doi.org/10.1093/9780197771808.001.0001 |
Datenträger: | Online-Ressource |
Sprache: | eng |
Bibliogr. Hinweis: | Erscheint auch als : Druck-Ausgabe |
Sach-SW: | Politics and Government |
| Politics & government |
K10plus-PPN: | 1892271494 |
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Lokale URL UB: | Zum Volltext |
978-0-19-777180-8
¬The¬ grammar of status competition / Beaumont, Paul [VerfasserIn]; 2024 (Online-Ressource)
69226648