More Details
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Summary:
- "Why have some attempts by great powers to establish authority over weaker states met with support from actors in these states? Why have some actors within weaker states fiercely resisted giving up their sovereignty? The following chapter lays out my theory in detail; I contend that subordinate actors are central to understanding how hierarchies develop in the international system"-- [Provided by publisher]
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Table of Contents:
- Introduction: Hierarchy and international politics
- Political survival and the surrender of sovereignty
- Submission, resistance, and war : national politics and Russian hierarchy in Georgia and Ukraine since independence
- Subnational politics and sovereignty in post-Soviet Georgia
- Mass politics and the surrender of sovereignty
- European informal empire in China, the Ottoman Empire and Egypt : hierarchy and informal empire in historical context
- Cross national variation in sovereignty and hierarchy
- Hierarchy, political order, and great power politics.
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Language Notes:
- Item content: English
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General Notes:
- Includes bibliographical references and index.
Description based on online resource; title from digital title page (viewed on April 07, 2020).
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Physical Description:
- 1 online resource (xiii, 274 pages)
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Digital Characteristics:
- text file
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Call Numbers:
- JZ1310 .S28 2020eb
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ISBNs:
- 1108786596 (electronic book)
9781108658461 (electronic book)
1108658466 (electronic book)
9781108786591 (electronic bk.)
9781108494502 (hardcover) [Invalid]
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Library of Congress Control Numbers:
- 2019042233
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OCLC Numbers:
- 1137743780