The United States: A normative power?
The United States: A normative power?
Author(s): Daniel S. Hamilton
Subject(s): International Law, Governance, International relations/trade, Politics and law, Geopolitics
Published by: CEPS Centre for European Policy Studies
Keywords: United States of America; Normative power; US Foreign policy; International norms;
Summary/Abstract: To what degree can the US be considered a normative power? The US foreign policy mainstream tends to reflect a varying blend of normative and hegemonic approaches. The US has been and continues to be simultaneouslya guardian of international norms; a norm entrepreneur challenging prevailing norms as insufficient; a norm externaliser when it tries to advance norms for others that it is reluctant to apply to itself; and a norm blocker when it comes to issues that may threaten its position, or that exacerbate divisions among conflicting currents of American domestic thought. On balance (and despite exceptions), theUS has sought to manage this normative-hegemonic interplay by accepting some limits on its power in exchange for greater legitimacy and acceptance of its leadership by others. The unresolved question today is whether the US and other key players are prepared to stick with this bargain.
Book: Who is a normative foreign policy actor? The European Union and its Global Partners
- Page Range: 76-155
- Page Count: 80
- Publication Year: 2008
- Language: English
- Content File-PDF