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Journal ArticleDOI

Status Seekers: Chinese and Russian Responses to U.S. Primacy

TLDR
In this article, the United States needs support from other states to carry out global governance, particularly from rising powers such as China and Russia, which are part of the liberal Western community, ruling out appeals to common values and norms.
Abstract
The United States needs support from other states to carry out global governance, particularly from rising powers such as China and Russia. Securing cooperation from China and Russia poses special problems, however, because neither state is part of the liberal Western community, ruling out appeals to common values and norms. Nevertheless, an alternative approach that is rooted in appreciation of China's and Russia's heightened status concerns may be viable. Since the end of the Cold War, Chinese and Russian foreign policy has been shaped by the goal of restoring both countries' great power status, which received major blows after China's Tiananmen Square repression and the Soviet Union's breakup and loss of empire. This desire for status can be explained by social identity theory, which argues that social groups strive for a distinctive, positive identity. Social identity theory provides a typology of strategies that states may use to enhance their relative status and suggests appropriate responses to sta...

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Respect and disrespect in international politics: the significance of status recognition

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors argue that even in international relations social respect can be a significant goal, both for instrumental reasons and as an end in itself In fact, as long as we ignore this dimension of international politics we will be unable to fully explain major features, specifically the intensity and duration of many cross-border conflicts.
Journal ArticleDOI

Reputation and Status as Motives for War

TL;DR: The authors provide a general conceptual framework that integrates strategic, cultural, and psychological logics to understand the tension between instrumental and intrinsic motives in justification for war, including whether leaders care about their reputations and status, whether observers draw inferences, and how these relate to domestic audiences.
Journal ArticleDOI

Reputation and Status as Motives for War

TL;DR: The authors provide a general conceptual framework that integrates strategic, cultural, and psychological logics to understand the tension between instrumental and intrinsic motives, and how observers draw inferences, to whom and across what contextual breadth these inferences apply, how these relate to domestic audience costs.
Journal ArticleDOI

Unrest Assured: Why Unipolarity Is Not Peaceful

TL;DR: The consensus view among international relations theorists is that unipolarity is peaceful as discussed by the authors, based on two assumptions: first, the unipole will guarantee the global status quo and, second, no state will balance against it.
Book

Russia and the West from Alexander to Putin: Honor in International Relations

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors discuss the Russian state and its honor in international relations, including the Holy Alliance, the Triple Entente, the early Cold War, the collective security, 1933-9 and the war with terrorism, 2001-5.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

In-group bias in the minimal intergroup situation: A cognitive-motivational analysis.

TL;DR: In this paper, a review of the research on intergroup discrimination in favor of one's own group is reviewed in terms of the basis of differentiati on between in-group and out-group, and the response measure on which ingroup bias is assessed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Social identity and intergroup relations

TL;DR: Tajfel as discussed by the authors proposed the Cognitive Construction of Groups (CCG) model, which is a cognitive redefinition of the social group and the determination of collective behaviour, and the battle for acceptance: an investigation into the dynamics of intergroup behaviour.
Book

The Tragedy of Great Power Politics

TL;DR: In this paper, Mearsheimer explains why the answer is no: a rising China will seek to dominate Asia, while the United States, determined to remain the world's sole regional hegemon, will go to great lengths to prevent that from happening.