The Grammar of Status Competition International Hierarchies and Domestic Politic
Oxford University Press

The Grammar of Status Competition International Hierarchies and Domestic Politic

Subjects: Politics, Political science & theory
ISBN13: 9780197771778
Published: 20 Oct 2024

Format - Hardback
By Beaumont, Paul David

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Regular price A$149.36
Sale price A$149.36 Regular price A$165.95
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The Grammar of Status Competition International Hierarchies and Domestic Politic

Regular price A$149.36
Sale price A$149.36 Regular price A$165.95
Product description

States do not only strive for wealth and security, but international status too. A burgeoning body of research has documented that states of all sizes spend considerable time, energy, and even blood and treasure when seeking status on the world stage. Yet, for all scholars' success in identifying instances of status seeking, they lack agreement on the nature of the international hierarchies that states are said to compete within. Making sense of this status
ambiguity remains the key methodological and theoretical challenge facing status research in international relations scholarship. In The Grammar of Status Competition, Paul David
Beaumont tackles this puzzle head on by making a strength out of status' widely acknowledged slipperiness. Given that states, statesmen, and citizens care about and pursue status despite its difficulty to assess, Beaumont argues that we can study international status hierarchies through these actors' attempts to grapple with this same status ambiguity. The book thus redirects inquiry toward the theories of international status (TIS) that governments and citizens themselves
produce and use to make sense of their state's position in the world. Advancing a new framework for studying such TIS, the book illuminates how specific theories of international status emerge, solidify, and become
contested, and how these processes influence domestic and foreign policy. Showcasing the value of a TIS approach via multiple historical case studies--from nuclear arms control to Norwegian education policy--Beaumont thereby addresses three major puzzles in IR status research: why states compete for status when the international rewards seem ephemeral; how states can escape the zero-sum game associated with quests for positional status; and how status scholars can overcome the methodological
problem of disentangling status from other motivations.

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