TY - BOOK ID - 98860842 TI - The balance of power : stability in international systems AU - Niou, Emerson M.S. AU - Ordeshook, Peter C. AU - Rose, Gregory F. PY - 1989 SN - 0521374715 0521376157 0511664281 PB - Cambridge New York Sydney University Press DB - UniCat KW - Balance of power KW - Social Sciences KW - Political Science KW - Political stability KW - Mathematical models. KW - Power, Balance of KW - Power politics KW - International relations KW - Political realism KW - Destabilization (Political science) KW - Political instability KW - Stability, Political KW - Consensus (Social sciences) KW - Legitimacy of governments UR - https://www.unicat.be/uniCat?func=search&query=sysid:98860842 AB - One of the fundamental issues of international relations concerns whether, and under what conditions, stability prevails in anarchic systems, these being systems in which all authority and institutional restraints to action are wholly endogenous. This book uses the tools of game theory to develop a comprehensive theory of such systems and details both necessary and sufficient conditions for stability. The authors first define two forms of stability: system and resource stability. International political systems are said to be stable when no state confronts the possibility of a loss of sovereignty. Resource stability, in contrast, requires that the current distribution of wealth and power among states can change only due to differences in the vitality of economies. The theory developed in this book refines the classic balance-of-power theory and formally incorporates into that theory the consideration of endogenous resource growth, preventive war, war costs and the imperatives of geography, revealing a fundamental conflict between the concepts of 'balancers' and 'central powers'. ER -