After Hegemony
After Hegemony (full title: After Hegemony: Cooperation and Discord in the World Political Economy)[1] is a book by Robert Keohane first published in 1984. It is a leading text in the neo-liberal school of international relations scholarship.
Content
The author shows that multilateral cooperation is possible in the absence of a hegemonic power. The crisis of multilateralism brought on by the United States at the end of World War II does not necessarily mean the end of multilateralism. Keohane thus fights against the idea that the decline of American power necessarily leads to the disappearance of international regimes.
The central thesis of Keohane, resolutely neo-institutionalist, is that multilateral institutions are useful to states. A greater institutionalization of international life, namely the development of international agreements, international regimes or international organizations, would make it possible to manage or even control global conflicts.