Date of Award

2008

Document Type

Thesis

Degree Name

Master of Arts (MA)

Department

Philosophy

First Advisor

Dr. William James Muck

Abstract

Will the future of hegemonic politics resemble the past? In the post-Cold war world, emergence of new actors will likely reshape hegemonic politics and potentially reconfigure the balance of power. As the world shifts from one era to another, the behavior of emerging actors like China will have far reaching implications. As the post-Cold war world's emerging hegemonic power, China presents the most challenging questions for scholars of international politics. This study draws from historical patterns detected from the behavior of two key hegemonic powers of the past fifty to a hundred years—Germany 1866-World War II and the United States 1898-end of the Cold war—in order to understand and to better predict China's behavior in the next fifty to a hundred years. Most scholars of hegemonic politics in the twenty-first century believe that it is essential to understand China's emergence and its implications for the international system.

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