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Journal ArticleDOI

International Subsystems: Stability and Polarity

Michael Haas
- 01 Mar 1970 - 
- Vol. 64, Iss: 1, pp 98-123
TLDR
In this article, a priori arguments have been presented to buttress the Kaplan and Waltz hypotheses and the presence of stabilizing crosscutting alliances is most likely within multipolar systems, which in turn are a function of the number of major powers and members of a system.
Abstract
One of the current controversies within international relations deals with the “stability” of bipolar as opposed to multipolar stratifications of world power. Morton Kaplan, in codifying the views of classical balance of power theorists, advances the view that multipolar systems are more stable than bipolar systems. Kenneth Waltz, sagely pointing to the relatively peaceful international arena since World War II, argues that a bipolar distribution of power can guarantee world stability. Many a priori arguments have been presented to buttress the Kaplan and Waltz hypotheses. In one of the most elaborate such formulations, the “interaction opportunity” hypothesis of Karl Deutsch and J. David Singer, the presence of stabilizing crosscutting alliances is postulated to be most likely within multipolar systems, which in turn are a function of the number of major powers and members of a system. In an attempt to bring the two opposing strands of theory into a larger framework, Richard Rosecrance more recently has suggested that bipolarity and multipolarity may each have their peculiar costs and benefits. Bipolarity, according to Rosecrance, is distinguished by (1) an absence of “peripheries,” such as areas for colonial expansion or neutral powers to woo; (2) all international behavior is highly politicized; (3) there are many crises; (4) changes in power confrontations are either significant or trivial, with no intervening shades of gray; (5) each pole is dominated by major powers highly motivated to expand their domains, willing even to incur brinksmanlike situations and hostility spirals; (6) no detente is possible. Multipolarity, on the other hand, is hypothesized to have (1) more interaction opportunities and thus less preoccupation (or obsession) with any one set of states; (2) fewer arms races; (3) more international conflicts; (4) the outcomes of international conflicts are harder to predict in advance; (5) changes in power confrontations have ambiguous consequences for the overall distribution of power. Rosecrance, therefore, urges a “bi-multipolar” arrangement that would combine the best features of both alternatives. The empirical questions and intriguing hypotheses so eloquently raised by Kaplan, Waltz, Deutsch, Singer, and Rosecrance have remained largely unexamined, however.

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References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Hierarchical Grouping to Optimize an Objective Function

TL;DR: In this paper, a procedure for forming hierarchical groups of mutually exclusive subsets, each of which has members that are maximally similar with respect to specified characteristics, is suggested for use in large-scale (n > 100) studies when a precise optimal solution for a specified number of groups is not practical.
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Politics Among Nations

L. H. Woolsey
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A general nonmetric technique for finding the smallest coordinate space for a configuration of points

TL;DR: In this article, a general coefficient of monotonicity, whose maximization is equivalent to optimal satisfaction of the Monotonicity condition, is defined, and which allows various options both for treatment of ties and for weighting error-of-fit.
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A framework for political analysis

David Easton
TL;DR: The work of as mentioned in this paper is the second in a projected tetralogy on empirically oriented political theory, and it is based on The Political System, which is the most important work in the history of political theory.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Framework for Political Analysis.