ABSTRACT

The United States is currently the linchpin of global trade, technology, and finance, and a military colossus, extending across the world with a network of bases and alliances. This book anticipates the possible issues raised by a transition between American dominance and the rise of alternative powers.

While a ‘post-American’ world need not be any different than that of today, the risk associated with such a change provides ample reason for attentive study. Divided into four parts, 50 international relations scholars explore and discuss:

    • Power Transitions: addressing issues including the rise of China; the passing of American primacy and the endurance of American leadership.
    • War and Peace: addressing nuclear weapons; the risk of war; security privatization and global insecurity
    • Global Governance: addressing competition, trade, the UN, sovereignty, humanitarian intervention, law and power.
    • Energy and the Environment: addressing resource conflict, petrol, climate change and technology.

This unique project offers a compilation of disparate arguments by scholars and policy practitioners, encompassing a plurality of disciplines and theoretical perspectives. By providing clarity and focus to this essential debate on the future of the world in the next several decades, Debating a Post-American World will be of interest to students and scholars of International Relations and global politics, American politics, US Foreign policy and International Security.

part I|38 pages

Setting the debate

chapter 1|11 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|10 pages

The Rise of the Rest *

chapter |2 pages

Postscript

The rise and fall of great powers

part II|116 pages

Power transitions

chapter 5|6 pages

The Real Post-American World

The Pax America's end and the future of world politics

chapter 6|7 pages

Grace, Murder, Or Suicide?

The passing of American primacy

chapter 9|5 pages

Déjà Vu All Over Again?

chapter 11|6 pages

A Post-American World?

Perils, possibilities, and preparations

chapter |3 pages

Postscript

Whither the American Colossus?

chapter 14|5 pages

Three Questions on China'S Rise

What is causing it? Will it continue? What are its consequences?

chapter 16|6 pages

A Hard act to Follow

Thoughts on world leadership in America's shadow

chapter 18|6 pages

The “rest” and the Global South

Varieties of actors, issues, and coalitions

chapter 20|7 pages

Two hubs, many spokes, no frame

The shape of post-American Americas

chapter 21|7 pages

Attraction and repulsion

Brazil and the American World

chapter 23|5 pages

Canada in the Post-American world

chapter |3 pages

Postscript

Balances disturbed

part III|53 pages

Of war and peace

chapter 25|7 pages

Our nuclear (free?) future

chapter 26|7 pages

Nuclear weapons

Stability of terror

chapter 30|6 pages

The global insecurity future

chapter |4 pages

Postscript

Security in the post-Cold War era

part IV|54 pages

Global governance

chapter 38|6 pages

2025

A new world order?

chapter 39|6 pages

Addressing “so what?”

Sovereignty and humanitarian intervention in a post-American world

chapter |4 pages

Postscript

Ordering anarchy

part V|43 pages

Energy and the environment

chapter 41|6 pages

Still living in a material world?

The “rise of the rest” and the question of resource conflict

chapter 42|4 pages

Democracy's petro-state

chapter 45|5 pages

Words from the forgotten

The environment and the post-American world

chapter 46|6 pages

Technology and the future

Lessons from the Green Revolution

chapter |3 pages

Postscript

Our fragile home

chapter 47|5 pages

Concluding reflections