Monday, April 27, 2015

Session 23-War and Hegemony

The ideas of hegemony and power are central to the notion of war. All form of international conflict is inherently a struggle for power, whether it comprises of ethnic conflicts with one group trying to dominate the other group or territorial disputes with countries trying to gain control over strips of land. Conflict occurs when one player in a situation feels that the other player will negatively affect something the first player values, which in the case of international conflict is a dominant or hegemonic position.

 A clear example of this is the World War I where both the Allies (led by Great Britain, France and Russia) and the Central powers (Germany and Austria) were at war with each other in order to establish dominance over the world.


In such cases conflict transcends classification into a single category and comprises of religious, ethnic, national, ideological and political conflict. Simply put, because state actors feel that their position might be usurped by the other player, the stakes become extremely high. In such a situation, wars become a zero sum game with each player values the other player’s losses and is willing to sacrifice for it. So any form of economic, human or capital losses that states suffer become less crucial than the destruction of the “other”, a phenomenon that was evident in all wars throughout history.

1 comment:

Unknown said...

You mentioned how wars such as the first world war cannot be classified into any single type of war, however, to me it is quite evident that the first world war was something political scientist classify as a "hegemonic" war. A war that is fought in order to show who the real hegemon is in the post war world. Moreover, it can be argued that if states had perfect information about the outcome of war then war itself wouldn't occur, something along the lines of game theory presented by John Nash. because a state will only attack another if it is surely going to win, and a state will surrender without fighting if it is surely going to lose. So i believe that all wars in principle come down to rationality and the decreasing level of conflict in the world can be attributed to the easier access of information.