Luis Leandro Schenoni

Regional Power Transitions: Lessons from the Southern Cone

GIGA Working Papers | 2016


  • Series

    GIGA Working Papers

    Series Number

    293

    Number of Pages

    33

    Publisher

    German Institute for Global and Area Studies (GIGA)

    Location

    Hamburg

    Pedro Sampaio Malan (Brazil) and Carlos Menem (Argentina) shake hands.
    © Reuters / Enrique Marcarian
    Pedro Sampaio Malan (Brazil) and Carlos Menem (Argentina) shake hands.
    © Reuters / Enrique Marcarian

    Abstract

    Approximately four decades ago, the Southern Cone witnessed the beginning of a transition from a bipolar balance of power between Argentina and Brazil to unipolarity under Brazilian primacy. While such processes are expected to generate conflict, this particular transition was cooperative, leaving an interesting IR puzzle unresolved: Why did Argentina stop counterbalancing Brazil and opt for accommodation instead? Building on power transition theory, I use process tracing to show that key cooperative turns in this bilateral relationship – during the late 1970s and early 1990s – were possible only after social coalitions were redefined in Argentina. My conclusions suggest that cooperation between Argentina and Brazil was not a product of democracy but rather a consequence of structural changes, at both the international and the domestic level.

    Dr. Luis Leandro Schenoni

    Dr. Luis Leandro Schenoni

    Kellogg Institute for International Studies, University of Notre Dame


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