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The Sources of Renewed National Dynamism / MICHAEL J. MAZARR, TIM SWEIJS, DANIEL TAPIA.

Van Pelt Library JZ1313 .M39 2024
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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Mazarr, Michael J., 1965-
Contributor:
Sweijs, Tim, 1981-
Tapia, Daniel
Rand Corporation. National Security Research Division.
Rand Corporation.
United States. Department of Defense
Series:
Research report (Rand Corporation) ; A2611-3.
Report ; A2611-3
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Balance of power.
Great powers.
United States--Foreign relations.
United States.
Community Resilience.
International Economic Relations.
Military Affairs.
Russia.
Security Cooperation.
United Kingdom.
Local Subjects:
Community Resilience.
International Economic Relations.
Military Affairs.
Russia.
Security Cooperation.
United Kingdom.
United States.
Physical Description:
xi, 113 pages : illustrations ; 23 cm
Place of Publication:
Santa Monica, CA : RAND, 2024
Summary:
History is full of great powers that hit a peak of competitive power and then stagnate and eventually decline. There are fewer cases of great powers that have confronted such headwinds and managed to generate a repeated upward trajectory--to renew their power and standing in both absolute and relative terms. Arguably, that is precisely the challenge that faces the United States. Its competitive position is threatened both from within (in terms of slowing productivity growth, an aging population, a polarized political system, and an increasingly corrupted information environment) and outside (in terms of a rising direct challenge from China and declining deference to U.S. power from dozens of developing nations). Left unchecked, these trends will threaten domestic and international sources of competitive standing, thus accelerating the relative decline in U.S. standing. In this report, the authors shed light on this challenge by examining the problem of national decline and renewal. It is part of a larger study on the societal determinants of a nation's competitive position, which has nominated several key qualities that determine a society's competitive success and failure. The findings of the first phase of the study suggest that it is very difficult for countries to achieve multiple periods of efflorescence or national peak dynamism. This report is one of several independent second-phase analyses on distinct topics that examine the prospects for the United States to do so, combining historical case analysis with contemporary assessments.
Contents:
CHAPTER 1: The Challenge of National Revitalization
CHAPTER 2: Defining National Decline and Renewal: A Limited Set of Cases
CHAPTER 3: A Modified Concept: Anticipatory Renewal
CHAPTER 4: Sources of National Decline and Stagnation: A Review of the Literature
CHAPTER 5: Case Studies of National Renewal: Essential Narratives
CHAPTER 6: Characteristics Associated with National Renewal
CHAPTER 7: Lessons for the United States
APPENDIX A: Case Study: Victorian-Era Great Britain
APPENDIX B: Case Study: Post-Gilded Age United States
APPENDIX C: Case Study: Late-Cold War Soviet Union.
Notes:
Title from PDF document (title page; viewed May 1, 2024)
"Prepared for the Office of the Secretary of Defense Office of Net Assessment"
"RAND NATIONAL SECURITY RESEARCH DIVISION"
Includes bibliographical references (pages 105-113)
Description from electronic resource
ISBN:
1977413250
9781977413253
OCLC:
1432705199

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