
Contents
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Lessons and Open Questions Lessons and Open Questions
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Status Is Local Status Is Local
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There are Many Paths to Status There are Many Paths to Status
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Status Concerns are What Count, Not Status Itself Status Concerns are What Count, Not Status Itself
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Status Dissatisfaction Leads to Escalation and Conflict, but What Else? Status Dissatisfaction Leads to Escalation and Conflict, but What Else?
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Implications for IR Implications for IR
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Policy Implications Policy Implications
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Cite
Abstract
This book has examined the importance of status in world politics. It has introduced the status dissatisfaction theory and applied it directly to the realm of international relations. It has tested the theory using a variety of approaches, including network analysis, by investigating the relationship between status dissatisfaction and war, if and how status concerns motivated German decision making during the Weltpolitik era, and the link between heightened status concerns and the escalation of commitment. The book concludes by discussing four broad lessons that can be drawn from the findings as well as the open questions that remain: status is local; there are many paths to status; status concerns are what count and not status itself; and status dissatisfaction leads to escalation and conflict. It also considers the policy implications of the theories of international politics.
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