Legitimating Power: The Domestic Politics of U.S. International Hierarchy

The United States has maintained international hierarchies over the Western Hemisphere for more than a century and over Western Europe for nearly seven decades. More recently, it has extended similar hierarchies over states in the Middle East. How does the United States exercise authority over other...

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Veröffentlicht in:International security 2013-10, Vol.38 (2), p.74-111
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description The United States has maintained international hierarchies over the Western Hemisphere for more than a century and over Western Europe for nearly seven decades. More recently, it has extended similar hierarchies over states in the Middle East. How does the United States exercise authority over other countries? In a world of juridically sovereign states, how is U.S. rule rendered legitimate? Hierarchy has interstate and intrastate distributional consequences for domestic ruling coalitions and regime types. When the gains from hierarchy are large or when subordinate societies share policy preferences similar to those of the United States, as in Europe, international hierarchy is possible and compatible with democracy. When the gains from hierarchy are small and the median citizen has policy preferences distant from those of the United States, as in Central America, international hierarchy requires autocracy, and the benefits of foreign rule will be concentrated within the governing elite. In the Middle East, the gains from hierarchy also appear small, and policy preferences are distant from those of the United States. As a result, the United States has backed sympathetic authoritarian rulers. Although a global counterinsurgency strategy might be viable over the long term, the costs of establishing effective hierarchies in the region imply that the United States is better off retrenching "East of Suez."
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source PAIS Index; Worldwide Political Science Abstracts; JSTOR Archive Collection A-Z Listing; Alma/SFX Local Collection
subjects Autarchy
Authoritarianism
Central America
Citizens
Coalitions
Cost
Counterinsurgency
Decision-making
Democracy
Equality
Europe
Evaluation
Foreign policy
Hierarchies
Hierarchy
Influence
INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
International security
LEGITIMACY
Middle East
Politics
POLITICS AND GOVERNMENT
Rebellions
Regulation
Social aspects
SOVEREIGNTY
U.S.A
United States
United States of America
Western Europe
title Legitimating Power: The Domestic Politics of U.S. International Hierarchy
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