@inbook{0bb9aedf4645469397f23edbc6c93747,
title = "What lies ahead for the organisation for economic co-operation and development?",
abstract = "The “rise of the rest” has prompted questions about the capacity and willingness of the United States to lead the liberal international order established under its post-war hegemony. Some prophesize that stronger connections amongst emerging powers are the basis for a parallel international order parading different rules, norms and institutions. 1 In contrast, Ikenberry argues that the visionary use of US power has woven capitalist and democratic societies together into a uniquely entrenched “Western” order that is “hard to overturn and easy to join.” 2 Prevailing arrangements will condition the environment within which rising powers make their decisions; nevertheless, by joining the Western order they may alter its character. Which of these visions pans out is vitally important to the outlook of a quintessentially Western institution, the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD).",
keywords = "OECD, Global governance, international relations, US hegemony",
author = "Richard Woodward",
year = "2013",
month = jan,
day = "1",
doi = "10.4324/9780203153970",
language = "English",
isbn = "9780203153970",
series = "Routledge Security and Governance Series",
publisher = "Taylor and Francis",
pages = "211--215",
editor = "Sean Clark and Sabrina Hoque",
booktitle = "Debating a Post-American World",
}