1. American Systemic Leadership: Its Unparalleled Rise and Slow
Retreat
2. System Leadership, Rise and Relative Decline in the Global
Political Economy
3. The Rise of the U.S. Economy
4. The 1920-45 Shift in U.S. Foreign Policy Orientation: Theory,
Grand Strategies and System Leader Ascents
5. The Relative Decline of the United States
6. The Dysfunctionality of Domestic Politics: A Form of Absolute
Decline
7. The Unipolarity Mirage
8. Inching Toward the Primus inter Pares Model and the End of
Systemic Leadership as We Have Come to Know It?
9. The Second Sino-American Rivalry
10. The Future of World Order
References
Index
William R. Thompson is Distinguished Professor and Rogers Chair in
Political Science Emeritus at Indiana University, Bloomington. He
is also Editor-in-Chief of the Oxford Research Encyclopedia in
Politics, a past President of the International Studies
Association, and twice Editor-in-Chief of the International Studies
Quarterly. Recent books include Racing to the Top, Shocks and
Rivalries in the Middle East and North
Africa, and Power Concentration in World Politics.
This volume deals with complex arguments using clear language,
fairly crafted propositions, well-designed indicators, and the very
insightful long leadership cycle perspective. It brings sharp focus
and real life into the increasingly foggy question of US decline."
-Robert A. Denemark, Professor of Political Science and
International Relations, University of Delaware
This book is an insightful inquiry into the decline of US hegemony
that deploys an evolutionary comparative perspective on the long
history of rise and fall of empires and hegemonic core states.
Thompson contends that the coming time of troubles will require
careful peaceful co-existence among the great powers to avoid
massive calamities." -Christopher Chase-Dunn, Distinguished
Professor of Sociology and Director of the Institute for Research
on World-Systems, University of California-Riverside
A superb treatment of the economic, technological, military, and
domestic foundations of the rise and prospective decline of
American pre-eminence in world politics over the last two
centuries. Thompson's theoretically innovative and empirically
systematic analysis, anchored in a deeper historical perspective,
is essential reading for anyone interested in the future of
American global leadership and world order." -Jack S. Levy, Board
of Governors Professor, Rutgers University
Thompson has been one of the major scholars contributing to our
understanding of international politics. At a time when scholars
are focused on the rise of China and the alleged decline of the US,
his most recent work in this area could not be more timely. And
unlike most approaches to the rise and decline of powers today,
this one is correctly placed in the context of long-term dynamics
that help explain where we are now and where we are heading.
Combining rigorous theory with new data on military and economic
capabilities, along with a strong historical perspective, this
excellent contribution to the field of international relations
should be on the desks of both scholars and students in the field."
-Thomas J. Volgy, The University of Arizona
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