EAI Fellows Program Working Paper Series No.5
A central debate in the field of international relations concerns the extent of balancing behavior. Kenneth Waltz’s confident assertion that “hegemony leads to balance,” and has done so “through all of the centuries we can contemplate”—is perhaps the default proposition in international relations. 1 Yet in recent years, the balancing proposition has come under increasing empirical and theoretical scrutiny. Empirically, the absence of obvious balancing against the United States in the post-Cold War era led to a scholarly debate about why that might be the case.2 Theoretically, advances by scholars working in both the rationalist and constructivist traditions have pointed out the myriad of ways in which state strategies depend on more than purely the distribution of power.3
David Kang is Associate Professor of Government, and Adjunct Associate Professor and Research Director at the Center for International Business at the Tuck School of Business at Dartmouth. Kang is author of China Reshapes East Asia: Power, Politics, and Ideas in International Relations (Columbia University Press, forthcoming). He has also written Crony Capitalism: Corruption and Development in South Korea and the Philippines (Cambridge University Press, 2002), and Nuclear North Korea: A Debate on Engagement Strategies (coauthored with Victor Cha) (Columbia University Press, 2003).
A central debate in the field of international relations concerns the extent of balancing behavior. Kenneth Waltz’s confident assertion that “hegemony leads to balance,” and has done so “through all of the centuries we can contemplate”—is perhaps the default proposition in international relations. 1 Yet in recent years, the balancing proposition has come under increasing empirical and theoretical scrutiny. Empirically, the absence of obvious balancing against the United States in the post-Cold War era led to a scholarly debate about why that might be the case.2 Theoretically, advances by scholars working in both the rationalist and constructivist traditions have pointed out the myriad of ways in which state strategies depend on more than purely the distribution of power.3
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