Global governance vs empire: Why world order moves towards heterarchy and hierarchy
Journal
Journal of International Relations and Development
ISSN
1408-6980
ISSN-Digital
1581-1980
Type
journal article
Date Issued
2015-01-05
Author(s)
Baumann, Rainer
Abstract
Current debates in International Relations (IR) entail two different claims regarding the global structures evolving in the post-Cold War world. Some suggest that the scope of the US power amounts to lasting American hegemony or even to a US empire; others speak of global governance in light of waning capacities of single states to tackle international problems or the growing salience of non-state actors. In this article, we discuss these two bodies of literature in conjunction. We argue that the global governance literature and the empire literature use different lenses to observe the same object, that is, world politics after the Cold War, and that they both address the question of power and authority in IR. The global governance literature identifies a diffusion of power and authority in world politics and thus a move from anarchy to heterarchy. The empire literature, in contrast, identifies a concentration of power and authority in the hands of the United States and thus a move from anarchy to hierarchy. We discuss different attempts to redress this seeming contradiction and show that there is much ground to believe that world politics is in fact characterised by both a concentration and a dispersion of power and authority. What we may see is neither global governance nor empire alone, but rather moves towards heterarchy and hierarchy at the same time.
Language
English
Keywords
empire
global governance
heterarchy
hierarchy
world order
HSG Classification
contribution to scientific community
HSG Profile Area
SEPS - Global Democratic Governance
Refereed
Yes
Publisher
Palgrave McMillan
Publisher place
Basingstoke
Volume
18
Number
1
Start page
104
End page
128
Pages
25
Subject(s)
Division(s)
Eprints ID
238903