CJO - Abstract - Thucydides and hegemony: Athens and the United States

Cambridge Journals Online

Cambridge Journals Online
Review of International Studies (2001), 27 : 593-609 Cambridge University Press
Copyright © 2001 British International Studies Association
doi:10.1017/S0260210501005939 (About doi)
Published online by Cambridge University Press 26 Nov 2001
Review of International Studies (2001), 27:4:593-609 Cambridge University Press
Copyright © 2001 British International Studies Association
doi:10.1017/S0260210501005939


After American decline?

Thucydides and hegemony: Athens and the United States


Richard Ned  Lebow  and Robert  Kelly 

Abstract

Fifth century Greeks distinguished between hegemonia (legitimated leadership) and arkhe (control). Thucydides employed this distinction to track the changing nature of the Athenian Empire during the Peloponnesian War, and the ways in which a diminishing concern for balancing self-interest against justice corroded Athenian authority, made survival of the empire increasingly problematic and encouraged the disastrous expedition to Sicily. The Melian Dialogue—often cited by realists to justify a power-based approach to foreign policy—is intended to symbolize this decay. Building on our analysis of Thucydides, we examine the British, Soviet and American experiences with hegemony. A striking feature of the contemporary American situation is the extent to which American leaders claim hegemonia but deny any interest in arkhe. Rightly or wrongly, much of the rest of the world has the reverse perception. This seeming contradiction has important implications for US foreign policy and world politics more generally.



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