Chain gangs and passed bucks: predicting alliance patterns in multipolarity
- 1 January 1990
- journal article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in International Organization
- Vol. 44 (2), 137-168
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0020818300035232
Abstract
Contemporary balance-of-power theory has become too parsimonious to yield determinate predictions about state alliance strategies in multipolarity. Kenneth Waltz's theory predicts only that multipolarity predisposes states to either of two opposite errors, which this article characterizes as chain-ganging and buck-passing. To predict which of these two policies will prevail, it is necessary to complicate Waltz's theory by adding a variable from Robert Jervis's theory of the security dilemma: the variable of whether offense or defense is perceived to have the advantage. At least under the checkerboard geographical conditions in Europe before World Wars I and II, perceived offensive advantage bred unconditional alliances, whereas perceived defensive advantage bred free riding on the balancing efforts of others.Keywords
This publication has 15 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Case for Finite Containment: Analyzing U.S. Grand StrategyInternational Security, 1989
- What's at stake in the agent-structure debate?International Organization, 1989
- Subject and system in international interactionInternational Organization, 1989
- Detente and Deterrence: Anglo-German Relations, 1911-1914International Security, 1986
- 1914 Revisited: Allies, Offense, and InstabilityInternational Security, 1986
- The Origins of Offense and the Consequences of CounterforceInternational Security, 1986
- The Offensive/Defensive Balance of Military Technology: A Theoretical and Historical AnalysisInternational Studies Quarterly, 1984
- Civil-Military Relations and the Cult of the Offensive, 1914 and 1984International Security, 1984
- Cooperation under the Security DilemmaWorld Politics, 1978
- Chamberlain and the warPublished by Cambridge University Press (CUP) ,1975