Powers and Principles
International Leadership in a Shrinking World
Contributions by Suzanne Nossel, Nikolas Gvosdev The National Interest, Ronald D. Asmus, Tod Lindberg Editor of Policy Review, Hoover Institution, Robert Cooper, Andrew Kuchins, Richard Weitz Center for Political-Mili, Dmitri Trenin Carnegie Moscow Center, Bates Gill director, Stockholm International Peace Research Institute, Wu Xinbo, Barbara Crossette former New York Times cor, George Perkovich, C Raja Mohan, Zeyno Baran, Ian O. Lesser, Huseyin Bagci, Paulo Roberto de Almeida, Miguel Diaz, Georges D. Landau, Pauline H. Baker, Princeton N. Lyman, Khehla Shubane, Suzanne Maloney, Ray Takeyh, Omid Memarian, Susan Ariel Aaronson, David Deese, Edward C. Chow, Steven Clemons, Weston S. Konishi, Masaru Tamamoto Edited by Michael Schiffer, David Shorr
Publication date:
16 June 2009Length of book:
328 pagesPublisher
Lexington BooksDimensions:
238x164mm6x9"
ISBN-13: 9780739135433
What if the major global and regional powers of today’s world came into closer alignment to build a stronger international community and shared approaches to twenty-first century threats and challenges? The Stanley Foundation posed that question to thirty-three top foreign policy analysts in Powers and Principles: International Leadership in a Shrinking World.
Contributing writers were asked to describe the paths that nine powerful nations, a regional union of twenty-seven states, and a multinational corporation could take as constructive stakeholders in a strengthened rules-based international order. Each chapter is an assessment of what is politically possible (and impossible)—with a description of the associated pressures and reference to the country’s geostrategic position, economy, society, history, and political system and culture. To provide a perspective from the inside and counterweight, each essay is accompanied by a critical reaction by a prominent analyst commentator from the given country.
Powers and Principles is aimed at both reflective practitioners of policy and policy-relevant scholars.
Contributing writers were asked to describe the paths that nine powerful nations, a regional union of twenty-seven states, and a multinational corporation could take as constructive stakeholders in a strengthened rules-based international order. Each chapter is an assessment of what is politically possible (and impossible)—with a description of the associated pressures and reference to the country’s geostrategic position, economy, society, history, and political system and culture. To provide a perspective from the inside and counterweight, each essay is accompanied by a critical reaction by a prominent analyst commentator from the given country.
Powers and Principles is aimed at both reflective practitioners of policy and policy-relevant scholars.
The distinct lack of agreement among major powers today contradicts the idea of an international community bound by a common moral code. International norms nonetheless exert a degree of moral and political force as powerful nations vie for status and influence. Powers and Principles uses a novel and illuminating approach to examine the role of benevolent impulses in international affairs.