Hegemonic transitions are never clear, and they usually emerge from a period of multi-polarity in the world-system. Two types of state tend to contend for power: trading states and territorial states, although most states are never “pure” and tend to contain within them multiple polities with different agendas. This book describes the hegemonic transition between two major trading states, Britain and America. British decline began in the late Victorian era, but the transition to American power was slow, and other states also sought hegemony. Transitions between trading states focus on economic struggle, though struggles between trading and territorial states and between territorial states are marked by armed conflict. In 1919 President Woodrow Wilson saw three arenas of competition developing between Britain and America: in international transportation, international communication, and petroleum. But Britain was challenged economically by America as early as 1861 via the Morrill Tariff, her economic hegemony was gone by the 1880s, and she was “defeated” by 1947. From the 1880s on both America and Germany sought to replace Britain as hegemonic power not only through their implementation of protectionist economic policies, but also through the adoption of revised versions of the world-economy, through new technologies, and, in the case of Germany, military power. Britain struggled to stay in place. Britain’s world-economy was that of a pure trading state. Maritime trade in organic materials was organized through global capitalism and control over submarine cable telecommunications rather than territorial possession. America’s rise was greatly helped by being a capitalist power in possession of a secure territorial base in the mid-section of the North American continent, but America suffered from multiple polities competing for power, with the South particularly problematic. Germany developed a radically new world-economy that synthesized resources using organic chemistry. German science and technology began to diffuse to American corporate laboratories before World War One. After that war, diffusion to American laboratories and universities was massive and helped secure American hegemony.
Author(s): Peter J. Hugill
Publisher: Lexington Books
Year: 2018
Language: English
Commentary: ---PDF (Conv. From .epub)---
Pages: 345
Tags: International Relations, International Business, International Economics, British/American Hegemony, Transition, Power
Cover......Page 2
Half-Title......Page 3
Title......Page 4
Copyright......Page 5
Contents......Page 6
Acknowledgments......Page 7
1 Transitions......Page 8
2 The Struggle over the Evolution of the Military and Merchant Marines......Page 45
3 The Struggle over Air Power and Technology......Page 76
4 The Struggle over Telecommunications......Page 136
5 The Struggle over Broadcasting......Page 169
6 The Oil War......Page 204
7 Multi-Polarity to Hegemony......Page 260
Conclusion......Page 297
Bibliography......Page 320
Index......Page 334
About the Author......Page 345