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Uncertainty, Shifting Power, and Appeasement
1996
American Political Science Review
Great Britain faced an immensely complicated strategic problem in the 1930s, and important aspects of it can be stylized as a situation in which a state that is declining in power is unsure of the aims of a rising state. If those aims are limited, then the declining state prefers to appease the rising state's demands rather than go to war to oppose them. If, however, the rising state's demands are unlimited, then the declining state prefers fighting. And, given that the declining state is
doi:10.2307/2945840
fatcat:qeyfs4nftfcsliwra36qx65j4m