Feature articles in this theme:
By Thomas P.M. Barnett
13 Jul 2010 |
World Politics Review
Reports of the imminent death of U.S. hegemony go at
least as far back as the Nixon administration, and to date, they have
all disappointed. While challengers have risen and fallen, none have
managed to make themselves full-spectrum superpowers. Now, with the "rise of the rest," we are
presented with the argument of a collective challenge to American world
leadership -- a notion that will
likewise prove disappointing.
By Nikolas Gvosdev
13 Jul 2010 |
World Politics Review
The debate over whether or not we have entered a "post-American world"
has become predictably stale. In one corner are the "declinists" who talk of the debilitating costs of America's imperial overstretch, while in the other are the optimists, who say that even if the U.S. is facing some bad numbers, every other great power is in an even worse boat. Both sides, in a way, are right.
By Parag Khanna
13 Jul 2010 |
World Politics Review
The insights generated from geopolitical schools of thought give us
enormous foresight into global trends. And for better or worse, they
support the argument that the global power structure continues to
rapidly diffuse away from American hegemony toward a post-American
world. This diffusion
is as inevitable as climate change.