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Hegemony and International Law

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  • Kruszewski, Charles

Abstract

In the titanic struggle for leadership in Europe, Great Britain is resisting the most formidable challenge to her supremacy. For centuries, her principal foreign policy was to prevent any establishment of hegemony over the entire European continent. After the first World War, British statesmen, however, were convinced “that they could no longer bear the burden of regulating world affairs alone. They urged a League of Nations…. But national sovereignties were no more prepared to collaborate in a democratic world organization than they had been to submit to British domination. Thus, instead of the League of Nations succeeding to the British imperial hegemony, the world fell into anarchy in a new struggle of several states, each striving to become the dominant Power.”

Suggested Citation

  • Kruszewski, Charles, 1941. "Hegemony and International Law," American Political Science Review, Cambridge University Press, vol. 35(6), pages 1127-1144, December.
  • Handle: RePEc:cup:apsrev:v:35:y:1941:i:06:p:1127-1144_04
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