JWSR Vol X1, Number 2, Special Issue, December 2006  Chaos or ReOrder? The Future of Hegemony in a World-System in Upheaval* introduction The latest resurgence of interest in the concept of hegemony¹—in the con-text of this study understood as the power of a state to exercise functions of leadership and governance over a system of sovereign states (Arrighi 1994: 27)— and empire, both in the popular and academic realm, has been mostly the result of a change in the perception of power, specifi cally its sources, application, and distribution. But what kind of hegemony? Hegemony over what? And why the sudden burst of interest in “empires,” at times used as a substitute for hegemony (implicitly or not), but often to describe a new or diff erent kind of hegemonic power? More to the point, though: How did such confusion arise, when those concepts, especially in the sociology literature, had received plenty of attention and scholarship, not only recently but several decades ago? Th ese questions make it well worth it to remind ourselves not only of the unfortunate disjunc- Observing the latest trends of a rise in interest in the development of power distribu- tion in a world-system created and dominated by states but increasingly challenged as such, this paper takes a deeper look at the histori- cal evolution of this system, its current trans- formation, and likely future development. After a brief discussion of prevalent concepts of world(-)system development and its socio- political control, this work offers an evolu- tionary perspective to place current changes of power and its distribution in the dynamic long-term development of global system for- mation. It then presents alternative visions of the future development of political and eco- nomic hegemony. It concludes that a further rise in instability of global political power dis- tribution accompanied by a likely challenge to existing distributional patterns has a high probability of occurrence. abstract: * Th e author would like to thank Mark Herkenrath, Claudia König, Hanno Scholtz, and Th omas Volken for providing the forum in which this article originated, and also extend his gratitude to the anonymous reviewer, as well as William R. Th ompson, George Modelski, Volker Bornschier, and Chris Chase-Dunn for their helpful comments and suggestions. ¹. “Hegemony” and “hegemonic leadership” are highly contested concepts and defi - nitions vary signifi cantly (for a discussion on the various defi nitions in this context, see Rapkin ; Goldstein , especially chaps.  and ). For the purposes of this paper, we use the terms hegemony, hegemonic leadership, and system leader interchangeably. We follow thus the Gramscian perception of hegemony as a combination of power in form of leadership based on both coercion and consent. Joachim K. Rennstich Department of Political Science Fordham University New York, NY 10023-7414 rennstich@fordham.edu http://www.rennstich.com Joachim Karl Rennstich journal of world-systems research, xi, , december , – Special Issue: Globalizations from ‘Above’ and ‘Below’ – The Future of World Society http://jwsr.ucr.edu/ issn 1076–156x © 2005 Joachim Karl Rennstich mailto:rennstich@fordham.edu http://www.rennstich.com http://jwsr.ucr.edu Joachim Karl Rennstich210 Chaos or ReOrder?  tion of sociological and (mainstream) political science studies of systemic state power but also of the uncertainty within the world-systems literature over its current state and future development. Th is article fi rst challenges the arguments of discontinuation of the world-system as a result of the decline of states and the globalized nature in its current stage, then continues to argue for an analyti- cal synthesis, not only of the existing sociology and political science literatures on the problématique of global hegemony, but also the broad spectrum of the social sciences in the form of an evolutionary model, briefl y presenting such an approach.² the rise and decline of hegemony³ Starting in the 1970s, the notion of waning U.S. power, both economically as well as militarily, introduced new interest in the discussion of hegemonic power status—characterized as having a disproportionate share of power in a social and interrelated world system—and the inherent cause for decline that lay in the exertion of acting as a “benign” hegemonic power, creating a stable liberal world market order (Kindleberger 1996) and thus allowing competitors to rise. For world-systems students (in the tradition of Wallerstein 1974; Chase-Dunn 1989; Arrighi 1994; Taylor 1996) and others following the structural world-his- torical development of the world system during the past centuries (in various lengths and variations, but as an interconnected social system, e.g., Frank 1978; Hugill 1993; Modelski and Th ompson 1996; Dark 1998; for a summary of the literature on long waves, see Goldstein 1988) this was hardly a surprising devel- opment. In fact, it was to be expected, as the decline from the initial height of American hegemony after World War II was merely following past trajectories of the rise and fall of actors characterized as hegemons (such as Portugal, the Dutch, and the British). Alongside neorealist structural studies of power distribution in a (Westphalian) state system, a new debate emerged about the meaning of what constituted power that would enable a state to exert infl uence over others. Th e new currency of power was thought to be coined through cooperation rather than coercion, as soft power replaced hard power as the critical element in such an environment (Keohane and Nye 1977, 1997; see also Nye 2004). Th e future issues seemed to be the forms of cooperative power, the eff ects of complex inter- dependencies on the rules of engagement in a new, transforming and globalizing world system, and the rise of regional powers rather than the question of a pos- sible challenge to the old hegemonic power status of the United States (Keohane 1984). For these observers, the very concept of the possibility of hegemonic power status in the traditional sense (of a mostly coercive nature executed by states) seemed to have lost any explanatory or predictive strength. But through the introduction of “new” forms of power, it was thought possible for the existing hegemon to lose one kind of power and substitute it with another, thus securing its relative share of power. Th ese analytical developments were largely the result of a division of labor in political science, where “security” students focused largely on an independent system of sovereign states battling over “high politics” (and hard power), whereas studies of the international political economy focused on the issues of “low politics” (and soft power) in at times overlapping, but mostly separate systems. As a result, many political scientists lost interest in the world- systems-based (and other long-term structural systemic) concepts of hegemonic power. However, the lack of an emergent “new world order” after the fall of the Berlin Wall (as announced by George Bush, Sr. but also promoted by Bill Clinton in another form) centered around a cooperative, interdependent world of states and non-state actors, but most certainly the events surrounding the 9/11 attacks muddled the analytical waters deeply and put to rest the “end of history.” Not surprisingly, the concepts of hegemony and/or empire have reappeared as a way out of this analytical mess in both the academic and more popular treatments of the subject (e.g., Hardt and Negri 2000; Chomsky 2003; Ferguson 2003, 2004; Rupert and Fitts 2004; Johnson 2005; Merry 2005). While it is true that the con- stituting elements of an interdependent world have not suddenly vanished, recent events in world politics (such as the American but also European responses to the 9/11 attacks, and the rise of China as a regional, if not global power) have demonstrated the continued role and importance of “traditional” (i.e., coercive) capabilities for the establishment and projection of power in the global system. Th e overwhelming massing of these traditional capabilities in a single and similarly traditional unit (i.e., a state) has brought back the analytical focus on the need for a thorough understanding of the complex and cyclical system of ². Th is model has been discussed in much greater detail elsewhere (Rennstich b, forthcoming). ³. Th e following review refl ects an extremely broad-brushed image of these devel- opments and leaves out many more nuanced approaches present in the political science literature during these phases. Its purpose is to portray the diff erent paths in the study of hegemonic power, or more specifi cally, the power of states to act as predominant lead- ers based on means of coercion or attraction, to readers who might be less familiar with these developments in the political science literature, rather than to paint a nuanced pic- ture of this very diverse fi eld itself. Joachim Karl Rennstich212 Chaos or ReOrder?  the “ceaseless accumulation of capital,” a feature characterizing “no other histori- cal system that ever existed before” (Wallerstein 1993: 293). It is important to note this diff erence, because this view does not deny the existence of previous existing interaction networks. However, they are viewed as so systemically diff er- ent in their “operating principle” that they need to be analytically categorized as separate entities and based on their diff erent organizational principle marked as “world-empires” (Wallerstein 1993: 293–294). From this perspective, the expansion of the world-system into a truly global, all-encompassing interaction-network of social, economic, and political rela- tions, results in a new phase of world-system development, marking, if not the end, then at least an unknown outcome of the current state of systemic chaos and thus the “end of the world as we know it” (Wallerstein 1999; see also Hopkins and Wallerstein 1996). In this view, the source and location of power changes dramat- ically, as states have lost their previous power status and thus their imprint on the world-system they previously shaped so signifi cantly. It is hardly surprising, then, to see a renewed interest in the analytical framework of “empires” in the literature (as discussed earlier). Th e operational mode of production—and thus the mode that created the world-system—has changed, as has the main unit of systemic development and control, the state. Th e next logical step is to ask: might this be the time now, when the world-system reverts back to a world characterized by the proto-capitalist empire-created modus operandus?⁵ Here we argue that an alternative view on the evolution of the historical world system (with and without the hyphen) into today’s global system can help to clear some of the analytical fog that has characterized the confused state of world-system analysis. We agree with Frank and Gills (1993: 303) in that “it is not the mode of production which determines the overall developmental patterns and outcomes of this game [i.e., world system/world-system development]—but the nature of the game itself, of which the various modes are (only) an element.” In this view, the driver of all world system history infl uencing the outcome of “development” in any particular part of the system is an element of the prevail- ing conditions of “development” (in particular capital accumulation) of the whole world system (Frank and Gills 1993: 302). If one can accept this notion of system development, world system development takes on a rather evolutionary charac- ter: the nature and the rules of Frank and Gill’s “game” do not change as much as implied by the world-system view of development. What does change are tech- hegemonic leadership. However, just as in the political science literature, scholars more traditionally associated with the question of global hegemony struggled throughout the 1990s to connect the world they seemed to experience with the traditional world-system concepts. Wallersteinians (Hopkins and Wallerstein 1996) declared an age of transition to the world-system (and even the end of the world) as we know it, Bornschier (1999) argued for “hegemony without a hegemon,” and the predominant question was that of (expected) systemic chaos but of a rather uncertain future, characterized by weakened states and a lack of alternatives to the structures instilled by the declining hegemonic power. Here we aim to provide not only a challenge to the view of “declining” states (arguing instead for a change of their roles to the one they occupied in earlier stages of the world system understood as an interconnected social network structure), and the view of a signifi cantly diff erent and thus in its development distinct world-system as the result of its true “globalization” (making the case for the need of a broadening of the conceptualization of the world-system as an identifi able social unit). We propose an alternative model that allows the inclu- sion of a wide range of literatures without a signifi cant loss of epistemological rigidity in the form of an evolutionary model of what is termed here an evolving global system. world-systems or world system formation – the debate Beginning with the work of Braudel (1992 [1979]), Wallerstein (1974, 1980, 1984, 1989) and others, signifi cant steps have been taken toward⁴ an understand- ing of the development of the world system/world-system in its historical evo- lution. Th is has expressed itself in the development of a wider range of what constitutes such a “world-creating” (following Wallerstein’s [1993: 294] notion of the world-system as a system that “is a world”) “set of nested and overlapping interaction networks that link all units of social analysis” (Grimes 1999: 30). For Wallerstein and many others in the world-systems tradition, the diff er- entiae specifi cae of the world-system born out of sixteenth century Europe was ⁴. See e.g., Abu-Lughod (); Arrighi (; see also Arrighi et al. ); Boswell (); Buzan and Little (); Chase-Dunn (, see also ; Chase-Dunn and Hall ); Dark (); Denemark et al. (); Frank (, ); Frank and Gills (); Freeman (; see also Freeman and Louçã ); Gilpin (); Goldstein (); Kennedy (); Modelski and Th ompson (); Hugill (); Modelski (, ); Pomeranz and Topik (); Pomeranz (); Rasler and Th ompson (, ); Taylor (); Th ompson (, ); Tilly (); Tilly and Stinchcombe (). ⁵. For a review of views on diff erent forms of modi operandi in the economic-sociol- ogy literature, see e.g., Nee and Swedberg (). Joachim Karl Rennstich214 Chaos or ReOrder?  niques of competition, of which the basic modi operandi have in fact been around for a considerably longer time than the sixteenth century. Th e actors, however, are merely changing positions. From this perspective, systems change in charac- ter and developmental style and control over much of the past century of world history, but not so signifi cantly as to merit a world-system of their own (see e.g., Frank 1998; Modelski 1990; Modelski and Th ompson 1996; Hugill 1993). Both sides of the debate agree on one thing, however: the transformation of a (or the) world(-) system into a global one. As argued above, the aim here is not to discuss the start of this global system, but rather to focus on the question of its current state: has the evolution of the system come to a halt or is the current state of systemic “chaos” just part of the regular transformation or maybe of a similar transformation than the one that took place with the rise of Europe as its (new) center in the sixteenth century? To ask this question is critical if one is to seek an answer for the future modus operandus and thus the necessary means of control within it, or put diff erently, what constitutes power and who can aim to wield it? Does hegemony continue to exert itself in a similar fashion as in the past (a single state possessing a disproportionate share of power in a system of states that acts as the overarching organizing principle of the world system) or not (new power- centers striving for the creation of far-reaching systems under their control, i.e., a return to empire-systems)? global system development: an evolutionary approach Evolutionary models are characterized by a focus on change, dynamics, and selection. Change in this view is constant, but never linear in its unfolding—it changes pace, intensity, and impact depending on the environment in which this change unfolds. In doing so, changes are aff ecting the development of environ- ments that in turn aff ect them (feedback eff ects). Th e world system constitutes such an environment of dynamical change. It follows in its development an “evo- lutionary logic” that explains the creation of “possibility space” or in other words the potential options for change open to the systems and its parts (see Clark et al. 1995). Th is evolutionary logic driving the global system process is based on the following set of epistemological assumptions of evolutionary economics (Andersen 1994), that also build the basis of the model presented here : • agents (e.g., individuals, groups, organizations, etc.) can never be “per- fectly informed” and thus have to optimize (at best) locally, rather than globally; • an agent’s decision-making is (normally) bound to rules, norms, and insti- tutions; • agents are to some extent able to imitate the rules of other agents (imita- tion), to learn for themselves, and are able to create novelty (innovation); • the processes of imitation and innovation are characterized by signifi cant degrees of cumulativeness and path-dependency (but may be interrupted by occasional discontinuities); • the interactions between the agents take place in situations of disequilib- ria and result in either successes or failures of commodity variants and method variants as well as of agents; and • these processes of change are non-deterministic, open-ended, and irre- versible. Th us, socio-political and ultimately global system change seen in this light is always a historical, dynamic process involving the use as well as the creation of resources (as diverse as simple objects, techniques and knowledge, or even entire social organizations). Th e evolutionary logic is the result of social interaction and thus human agency. Th is agency, however, takes place and is embedded in an institutional and technological context. In other words, whereas the driving logic (human agency) of this process remains the same, its context changes, constitut- ing a “social learning algorithm” of evolutionary change that is at work at all levels of the global system process (from the individual to the change of the global system as a whole). Within the framework presented here, the four mechanisms driving the evolutionary globalization process and constituting a “social learn- ing algorithm” are: (i) variety creation (very broadly: cultural process); (ii) coop- eration or segregation (social process); (iii) selection (political process); and (iv) preservation and transmission (economic process). Since such a synthesis has to be an ordered one, all world system processes have a time-structure that allows for successive optimizations of these mecha- nisms in a formal-logical “learning sequence” (following the numbered sequence above). Global system processes in this view, then, are seen as nested and syn- chronized (i.e., coevolving) four-phased temporal learning experiments driven by a common evolutionary logic inherent in all these processes. From an evolutionary perspective, the development of the global system as we experience it today has been characterized by what McNeill and McNeill (2003) describe as a process of intensifying connections of human “webs.” Th ese webs were rather diverse in their form, strength of connections, and the areas and peoples that they covered. Th rough the gradual amalgamation of many smaller webs into a single world web, the global system emerged in the form of the “Old World Web” spanning most of Eurasia and North Africa and formed about 2,000 years ago. With the expansion of oceanic navigation, a more complex and extended (both in depth and width) single “cosmopolitan web” emerged out of Joachim Karl Rennstich216 Chaos or ReOrder?  existing metropolitan (and the few remaining local) webs, creating a truly global, single human web. Descriptions of the development of a global system abound (as discussed above). Th e analysis of McNeill and McNeill has been used here in order to high- light two of the most important aspects of the global system formation, often only implicitly acknowledged in the respective analyses: the evolutionary character of its development and the complexity of its connection. Th is study is based on and extends the empirical analysis of the development of the modern era system (i.e., the current global organization phase in the global or world system process) as put forward by Modelski and Th ompson (1996) and Rennstich (2003b). Th e model developed there takes into account the dynamic processes of the evolu- tionary drive of the global world system process and the resulting change in the overall network structure of the nested, coevolving cultural, social, political, and economic processes. system complexity and world system evolution To readers familiar with existing long-wave narratives of world system devel- opment it is important to note the inclusion of the element of system complexity in the model presented here. In this view, a crucial aspect in terms of its evolu- tion from a set of previously loosely related webs or sub-systems into the far more interconnected global system of today is the connection between system complexity and the “weaving of the global web” as a developmental process. Th e advantage of employing an evolutionary model in the analysis of systems even on a “world” scale is that it allows us to draw on the important insights of other research traditions, employing fi ndings from seemingly unrelated subject mat- ters, that nonetheless contribute signifi cant theoretical and empirical fi ndings for our study of global system evolution. Especially the work of Devezas and his col- laborators (Devezas and Corredine 2001, 2002; Devezas and Modelski 2003) has signifi cant implications for a more thorough understanding of the evolutionary processes shaping world system development. Change in complex systems, whether in the direction of greater or lesser complexity, produce a trajectory or “historical path,” limiting future options and thus becoming path-dependent in this way.⁶ As a consequence, complex systems such as the nested global economic, political, social, and cultural processes under study here exhibit a tendency to “self-organization,” that is, the endogenous ordering into hierarchies gives them a system-wide form.⁷ Th e way the inter- relationships between parts of the systems are established—i.e., the weaving of the webs or, put diff erently, the structure of the networks making up the global system—thus becomes crucial for our understanding of the dynamics of these coevolving structures. Figure 1 illustrates graphically the relationship between the rate of change, rising system complexity, and prevalent system network structure or “mode of web-weaving” (see Rennstich 2003b, for a more thorough discussion of this argu- ment). C represents the rate of complexity that rises over time, displayed on the ⁶. Th is is the result of the structure of complex systems. Whereas in systems theory all sub-systems relate to each other, complex systems consist of networks of links of vari- ous types between all parts of the system, but each part is not necessarily linked with all others, in the same way. ⁷. As a result, these complex systems exhibit “morphogenesis” (i.e., the development of an organism or of some part of one, as it changes as a species) based on processes that are partly independent of agency, although they require agents to both initiate and enact them (Dark ). external network structureinternalexternal network structure Global System Process (cultural) Global Community Process (social) Global Political Evolution (political) Global Economic Evolution (economic) 1740 1970 Punctuation (i.e., "catastrophic change") A B A' C Atlantic Europe Sung Commercial Oceanic Trade Ind. Take-Off Information Digital 230018501430900 Preconditions Global Nucleus Global Organization Consolidation Eurasian Transition Atlantic Pacific DemocracyExperiments Figure 1 – Evolutionary Model of Global System Formation, 930CE–2300CE* * Figure 1 graphically summarizes our model of the modern era globalization process that is the basis of this analysis. In this view, the global system process is driven by the nested processes of economic development (most-inner octagon, labeled Sung, Commercial, Oceanic trade, Industrial take-off, Information, and Digital); political development (bullet-shaped boxes, labeled Eurasian transition, Atlantic-Europe, and Atlantic Pacific); and social development (rounded boxes labeled Experiments and Democracy). Together, they constitute the global system development (represented by the thin-grey box framing all other processes). Joachim Karl Rennstich218 Chaos or ReOrder?  Th is structure is mainly the result of the need to cope with a rise in com- plex decision-making through externalization of the decision-making process.¹⁰ However, the more complex the system becomes—that is, the wider the pos- sibility space extends—the more liable it is to collapse. Th is collapse takes place in the form of a selection of best adapted organizational and institutional vari- ance, as the possibility space for change begins to close and the system becomes hypercoherent. Surrounding the time of this punctuation (starting around the middle of the eighteenth century), the global system process is marked by an important change in the form of its “web-weaving” or network formation. Rather than seek- ing to manage the extension between webs, large metropolitan webs aim to turn into single, large “mono-structures” with control over the entire web rather than mainly the external connections to other webs, manifesting the selected organi- zational and institutional structures. Th is network-system mode remains largely in place, until a new phase of evolutionary dynamic sets in the late twentieth century (in the second half of the twentieth century, see Figure 1), bringing back the main focus on the organizational control of the connections between existing webs or networks. Point B in Figure 1 represents the point at which catastrophic change into a decline mode occurs. Th e network structure of the global system during its initial unfolding remains external in nature, bringing with it ever-higher levels of com- plexity as the webs deepen in both depth and width. During point A, the point of hypercoherence, the network structure becomes internally oriented, leading to point B, to “catastrophic change” or punctuation (i.e., the selection of a macro organizational and institutional model in the global community process).¹¹ x-axis. Th is graphical representation does not aim to portray any “exact” starting date from which world system formation sprang up. Th e date indicated (from around 930 c.e.) marks instead the fi rst emergence of the system-weaving mode (or modus operandus) of the stage in world (and ultimately global) system devel- opment that characterizes global system development until somewhere in 2300 c.e., when this developmental stage is expected to take on a new dynamic. Th e y-axis label C is short for “system complexity” and represented by the bold-grey, wave-like arrow in Figure 1). A indicates the point at which growth in complexity will begin to slow, as hypercoherence takes aff ect and the possibilities for change (i.e., possibility space) begin to decrease rapidly. Since complex socio-political systems (like all complex systems) will inhibit an internal dynamic which leads them to increase in complexity, the rate of decision-making must, necessarily, keep pace with this increased complexity (see also Devezas and Corredine 2001, 2002). Th is system increases in reach and overall complexity until (during the nine- teenth century) it reaches a state in which the path-dependent system eventually runs out of future possible choices, a state also referred to as “hypercoherence”⁸ that regularly occurs in any complex system.⁹ In other words, the global system experiences a systemic punctuation (also referred to as “catastrophic change”) around 1850, resulting in the end of the experimental phase in the global com- munity process and starting with the democratic phase as the set-up that seems the most fi t and effi cient in the global social system (see Rennstich 2003b). Decision-making (and thus the process of agency) does not take place in an isolated environment but rather a strongly contextual one, marked by high levels of feedback eff ects: agency aff ects the environment in which it unfolds, but also is formed by it. Th us, it is important not only to focus on the agents (in the con- text of this work states aiming for systemic leadership or hegemony) but also to identify the contextual environment in which this agency takes place. ⁸. Th e terms “hypercoherence” or “catastrophic change” refer not to the overall breakdown of the global system process, but rather to the terminology used in chaos- and catastrophe-theory. Th ey represent an “option-narrowing” as the result of the selection of a new organizational and institutional setting in the global community process. After a relatively short period of internal network structure dominance, the system reverts to an external system structure, setting in motion a new rise of complexity, bringing with it a new phase of externally open systems and consequently in the end leading to a new stage of hypercoherence. ⁹. For a discussion of complex-systems theories, see Auyang (). ¹⁰. A good example might be the diff erence in organization of the decision-making process in a small four-person fi rm in contrast to the hierarchical structure found in much larger enterprises. Th e sheer complexity of the need for individual decisions ren- ders it impossible for a single person to make all the necessary decisions. Rather, these organizations develop mechanisms of delegating decision-making, connecting several agents over a number of hierarchies in a joint decision-making network. Th e world as a whole also resembles such a joint decision-making network. It permeates from the global system process to the nested social and political processes and the inner core of the eco- nomic process. During this “search phase” of expanding possibility space, the dynamics of the system develop best in a relatively (externally) open environment. ¹¹. It is important to note that “catastrophic change” here refers not to a breakdown of the global system process, but rather to the terminology used in chaos- and catas- trophe-theory and represents an “option-narrowing” as the result of the selection of a new organizational and institutional setting in the global community process. After a Joachim Karl Rennstich220 Chaos or ReOrder?  New innovations and technologies and their accompanying institutional arrangements or paradigms¹² made it possible to extend the management of entire webs rather than just the external network of relationships between exist- ing webs, the major units of the global web—large, metropolitan webs with their respective hinterlands—could now viably seek to extend those hinterlands and incorporate large chunks of previously connected but largely independent webs into their own domain. As a result, the major mode of network structure creation and control switched from an external network-oriented one to one focused on the control of internal networks that remained connected with other webs (form- ing a large global web) but shifted their focus on the internal networks rather than the external ones. Ultimately, however, the control of these systems proved too complex, result- ing in a state of hypercoherence of the global web (as described above). Since the middle of the twentieth century, the global system—again as a result of new technologies shifting the focus on control of external network connections rather than control over entire webs—has begun a new stage of global system forma- tion that now incorporates not only the physical domain of human interaction but also the “virtual” one that can be captured in a binary (or “digital”) code. system complexity and world system network structures To use the image employed by McNeill and McNeill, the punctuation of the global system (starting around the middle of the eighteenth century) marks a change in the “spinning” of the global system web. Up to this point, webs had been extended and newly formed mostly in the form of the establishment of link- ages between preexisting (metropolitan) webs and in turn creating a larger, single web, a process we could describe as “external network” or web extension. What changes during this time, is the increasing tendency of “internal web weaving,” that is the attempt to extend preexisting large webs internally to create rivaling, that is, alternative rather than complementing webs or networks.¹³ Table 1 lists the development of the network structure in addition to the coevolution of the economic and political process of globalization, describing the leading sectors of each economic Kondratiev- or K-wave and the lead economy of each political long wave of global world system leadership.14 Th e roots of the three main network systems in existence so far can be found in the evolutionary “trials” (as part of the evolutionary development of variety creation) during the two Chinese-dominated periods emerging roughly in 900 c.e.¹⁵ Especially the Southern Sung period during the eleventh and twelfth century provides many elements that are similar to those present in the following maritime network system. Given their lineage and the larger evolutionary pattern of development, however, it is analytically more sensible to regard them as evolutionary trials rather than part of the fi rst external network system. Observing this process, we are able to mark three distinct network phases during the evolution of the modern world system: a maritime commercial phase (Genoa, Venice, Portugal, Dutch, England I), an industrial phase (England II, US I), and the emerging digital commercial phase (US II). All three phases can be divided into two meta-systems of internal and external network phases (as a result of leading sectors and the diff erent technological styles, see Table 1).¹⁶ In sum, the global system process during the time of the punctuation (from roughly the 1740s to 1970s, see Figure 1) changes from a process marked by external struc- ture connections to one marked by internalizing webs, manifesting the selected relatively short period of internal network structure dominance, the system reverts to an external system structure, setting in motion a new rise of complexity, bringing with it a new phase of externally open systems and consequently in the end leading to a new stage of hypercoherence. ¹². See Perez () for an excellent discussion on the relationship between technol- ogy, capital, and socio-economic and techno-economic paradigms that determine what in evolutionary models is referred to as possibility space. ¹³. We do by no means intend to deny a continuing connection between these webs—a prerequisite for the argument of a continued development of a single, extending global system. What is important in this context is the shift of emphasis from control of web connections to one of control over larger sub-webs as a whole. Th is process often in- cluded the usurpation of smaller, existing webs into a larger “imperial” web with the aim to extend the sphere of control of a web, rather than extending the web through external connections only through the focus on the control of the connections rather than the other webs themselves. ¹⁴. Kondratiev or K-waves describe the emergence and subsequent decline of long- term economic cycles (roughly  years in length) that are superimposed on shorter—and better known—business cycles, describing the “capitalist pulse” of the economic global system process. For a discussion of the concept of K-waves in the context of the model employed here, see Rennstich (a, b). For a more general discussion on K-waves, see Duijn (); Goldstein (); Berry (); Freeman and Louçã (). ¹⁵. Th is work follows the increasing use of c.e. (Common Era) and b.c.e. (before the Common Era), which replaces the traditional dating system employing a.d. and b.c. respectively for the same periods. ¹⁶ For a full discussion of these phases, see Rennstich (b; see also Rennstich a). Joachim Karl Rennstich222 Chaos or ReOrder?  within and partially over it? Both views discussed earlier might not agree on the evolutionary story line of world system(s)/world-system(s) development, they do, however, agree upon its most powerful actors. An apparent characteristic of hegemonic leadership within the world system (with or without the hyphen) in most treatments of the subject seems to be located in the state and is marked by the inability of the existing leader to prevent its own decline in relative position dominance. Th is shift in the geographical and socio-political location of power has been explained as the outcome of the leader’s experience of success in the current setting, creating an entrenched institutional setting (in a broader sense) that proves adaptive in defending its turf but less so in fostering the rise of new leading sectors.¹⁸ Th e regular clustering of innovations (both technological and institutional) in space and time leads to the emergence of new leading sectors, thereby marking the “pulse” of the global web and determining the speed and form of its weav- ing. Th ese new leading sectors enable a new way of solving old, existing global problems (communication, transportation, production, facilitation of trade, social organization, etc.), allowing one particular unit of the global web (here: states) to exercise a disproportionate share of dominance and control over the global web for a limited period of time, until the advancements made by one unit are diff used among the system, laying the foundation for a beat of the pulse to emerge. Th is pattern is captured in long-waves of the co-development of eco- nomic and political advancement and subsequent dominance of particular units of the global web and summarized in Table 1. It is important in this context to keep the evolutionary development of the global web in mind: hegemony during the early stages of the weaving of the global web requires diff erent capabilities and takes diff erent forms than the exercise of a disproportionate share of power in more recent years. As we will argue in the fol- lowing section, this development also is by no means linear. Being able to exercise hegemony in the global web of 2004 does not simply require x-times more capa- bilities than it did in the 1800s. Rather, we have to diff erentiate between diver- gent types of capabilities, diff erent meanings of control, and as a result diff erent concepts of what establishes hegemony over the global web.¹⁹ Th erefore, we have organizational and institutional structures, until a new phase of evolutionary dynamic sets in during the late twentieth century.¹⁷ hegemony and world system evolution Having described the environment that forms what we identify as the world and now global “system,” what about the actors that aim at exercising control ¹⁷. Th e change in the dominant mode of the weaving of the global web is crucial for a full understanding of the meaning of “domination” and “control” of the global system. Hegemony—as we understand here based on a disproportionate share of power in the global web—means quite diff erent things in a system based on external-network control or in one that is characterized by hegemonic units controlling entire large webs, focusing on internal-network control (see below for an extension of this discussion). ¹⁸. See footnote  for narratives from a wide range of perspectives. ¹⁹. We agree with Arrighi (: ), that “inter-state and inter-enterprise competi- tion can take diff erent forms, and the form they take has important consequences for the way in which the modern world system—as a mode of rule and as a mode of accumula- tion—functions or does not function.” Table 1 – Evolutionary Global System Process Model, 930 CE–2080 CE Starting (≈year) Global Process Global Process Global Political Evolution (long cycles) Global Economic Evolution (K-waves) Network Republican Genoa Venice Commercial / Nautical Revolution external1190 Global Nucleus Calvinist Atlantic Europe Portugal Dutch Republic Oceanic Trade external1430 Liberal Britain I Britain II Industrial Take-Off transition internal 1640 Global Organization Democracy Democratic groundwork Atlantic-Pacific USA Information K17 Electric, steel K18 Electronics Digital K19 Informational Industries K20 Digital Network (?) internal transition external external 1850 2080 China (?) K21 (?) Source: Based on Modelski (2000) and own additions. All years C.E. Community Structure Preconditions Experiments Reforming Eurasian Transition North Sung South Sung Sung Break-Through build-up, external 930 transition System Joachim Karl Rennstich224 Chaos or ReOrder?  to pay special attention not only to the evolutionary character of the unfolding of the global web, but also the factors that determine the “type of weaving” of the global web, here identifi ed as “internal” and “external network systems.” internal and external network systems Th e commercial maritime system is in large part characterized by its emphasis on external networks of production and other value-adding processes (including the division of labor) and the importance of fl ows within the world economic system. Th e leading sectors in this phase are predominately service- or fl ow-oriented. Th ese include the Champagne fairs and Genoan Atlantic trade and trade in the Black Sea during long cycle three (under Genoan leadership), Romanian and Levantine galley fl eets during long cycle four (Venice), the control over Guinean gold and Indian pepper (Portugal), Baltic, Atlantic, and later Asian trade control of the Dutch, and Amerasian trade control of the British during long cycles fi ve, six, and seven respectively (see Table 1).²⁰ It also is important to note that the controlling metropolitan centers of these dominant webs during this phase of the global system development remain rela- tively small in size (in terms of population and geographic extension, including their respective hinterlands). Th eir main focus on the control of the external web-connections (and internal control over the most profi table new leading sec- tors) rather than attempting to create entire webs under their control allowed them to exercise an extraordinarly high level of control—or hegemony—in the expanding global system as a whole. Hegemony in this context therefore refers to a disproportionate share of external network control in the global system. As argued earlier, beginning in the period often referred to as “industrial- ization,” new innovations and technologies enabled the management (and thus centralized control) of far more extended webs, both in institutional depth and geographic width. Th e leading sectors that are the basis of the capitalist pulse during this period (see Table 1) are marked not only by the enabling of manage- ability of far more complex systems or webs but also in the dual strategic sig- nifi cance for military self-suffi ciency and national economic independence held to provide the rationale for the desire to acquire this group of industries (Sen 1984). So-called “great-power states”—the main “web-weavers” in this system—try to establish internal rather than external networks, in order to, as Rosecrance (1996: 6) puts it, “excel in all economic functions, from mining and agriculture to production and distribution.” During this phase the main focus of network-cre- ation and control is on the internal aspect of the systems. Th is emphasis on self- suffi ciency and national economic independence characterizing the industrial global economic phase stands in stark contrast to the necessities of an external network- and service-based environment as found in the maritime commercial and digital commercial systems. Th e industrial system, in contrast to the maritime commercial system, has its main center located in internal production networks. Th e leading sectors in this mode are commonly associated with our understanding of “industrialization”— Britain’s dominance of cotton and iron production, and later railroads and steam during the eighth long cycle, followed by the leadership in steel, chemicals, elec- tric power, motor vehicles, aviation, and electronics of the United States during the ninth long wave (see Table 1). Whereas previous innovations and technologies that developed into new leading sectors dominating the development of the global system were largely enablers of external network domination, the leading sectors and their accom- panying technologies of the industrial phase allowed control of complexity on a much larger scale than previous technologies did. Th is transition can best be viewed in the structural change of textile manufacturing under British organiza- tion.²¹ In the seventeenth and eighteenth century, production factories set up by companies such as the English East India Company on the (eastern) outer realms of the British (and more generally, European) controlled network of the world economy spanned entire continents and included a sophisticated system of fi nancing and what in today’s terms would be referred to as outsourcing of production to external, independent contractors. In the latter half of the eigh- teenth and nineteenth century, this production system was replaced by factories organized around individual fi rms in the center of a less externally-oriented, but more vertically integrated world-economy with its center in Britain.²² Starting out in the beginning of the seventeenth century by concentrating on Surat and Bantam, it had by the 1680s moved on to Madras and the Coromandel, ²⁰. Although the earlier Sung periods (especially the second, southern Sung) could be regarded as maritime in nature, we view them here as parts of the experimental vari- ety-creation process inherit in evolutionary systems. ²¹. It is important to note the emphasis on production networks. Trade fl ows re- mained their mode of expansion, both in volume and reach, throughout the entire pe- riod, although the center of control and the direction of fl ows changed substantially as a result of a change in production patterns. ²². As early as , Unwin (), argued that “one of the largest and most obvious aspects of the Industrial Revolution is the change involved in the direction of world trade Joachim Karl Rennstich226 Chaos or ReOrder?  and, by the end of the century, began to expand its operations in Bengal, Bihar, and Orissa, centralizing as much as it could of the Indian supply of piece goods through its use of the dadni (i.e., contract) system (Barr 1991). Th e networks of procurement and supervision set up by the English far surpassed in volume and density those of their predecessors and competitors, characterized by a simulta- neous commercial and territorial expansion (Arrighi et al. 1999: chap. 2). Th is marked a signifi cant change from a preference of control over trading nodes to a preference for greater control of the production of key commodi- ties, which involved necessarily greater territorial control as well. Th us, follow- ing a practice introduced in Bengal in the 1750s, the dadni system, which relied to a great degree on outsourcing the production to contracting partners, was replaced by an agency system (see Barr 1991). Under this new system, each of the company’s factories integrated (“insourced”) production in specialized centers, called arangs. Th is higher level of centralized integration foreshadowed the transition from an external-network based production structure to an internal one. By the end of the eighteenth century, the regime of factories abroad was “an outdated and disintegrating regime…a regime in crisis” out of which a “new regime of factories at home” emerged, “which, by the 1830s, had eff ectively supplanted the regime of factories abroad” (Barr 1991: 82). Th e concentration of production and major reorganization of labor and other factors of production characterized this new regime, in new spatial arrangements, and with an increasing emphasis on mecha- nization of production. Th e use of the example of Britain’s ability to maintain its central position in the global system is not accidental. As argued earlier this period was one of tran- sition from the external network structure of the maritime commercial system to that of internal networks marking the punctuation of the global system as a whole. As the example above makes clear, the grounds for Britain’s preeminent position in the global system changed signifi cantly during this period: the impor- tant aspect was, however, Britain’s continuation of dominance when in all previ- ous pulsations of the global system the location “hegemonic heart” of the system shifted in location (see Table 1). systemic chaos and network systems Th e notion of systemic “chaos” as the result of the disintegration of the sys- temic system put into place by the hegemonic leader as an outcome of its waning power is present in both Arrighi’s (1994) model (from whom we have adopted the term) and Modelski and Th ompson’s (1996) model (using the term “decon- centration”) and both agree on the importance of the unraveling of the old for the creation of the new system. In our synthesis (see Rennstich 2004b for a more detailed discussion) we combine Modelski and Th ompson’s notion of hege- monic crisis and global war as a catalyst for the transition to the new system with Arrighi’s concept of systemic transition and chaos. Figure 2 graphically summa- rizes this model of hegemonic transition. Th e four boxes with the rounded bottom-part represent the global web as a whole (consisting of a variety of subwebs, etc. that are not graphically rep- resented here) at each step of its development from one hegemonic phase to another. Systemic expansion, in this view, allows the development of new clusters of innovations that lead to the emergence of new leading sectors and result in the emergence of new confi gurations of power in the form of alternative political and economic institutions. Th ese developments cause the rise of a new center of systemic capabilities and an increased inter-state and inter-enterprise competi- tion, ultimately laying the foundation for a new commercial and organizational arrangement and also the rise of challengers to the existing leader, whose domi- nation of the system starts to decline. in textiles. Th e fl ow of piece-goods, which had for a century been westwards from Asia to Europe, turned eastwards from Europe to Asia….[T]he new factory system of the west displaced, as far as the production of cotton goods was concerned, an older factory system, which we may regard as essentially of the east, and of which the English factories established in India in the early seventeenth century were representative cases” (quoted in Barr : ). diffusion imitation reinforcement syste mic expa nsion centralization of systemic capabilites TRANSITION systemicinstability global warfare syste mic selec tion systemic chaos Figure 2 – Dynamics of Systemic Leadership Transitions? systemic rorganization by new hegemonic state systemic reorganization by old hegemonic state (Phoenix Cycle) HEGEMONY HEGEMONY old system new system systemic reorganization by hegemonic state emulation of hegemonic state innovation new leading sectors emergence of alternative / new configurations of power rise of new challenger(s) Source: Based on Arrighi & Silver et.al. 1999: 29 and own additions. Joachim Karl Rennstich228 Chaos or ReOrder?  a new hegemonic leader, we argue here that the emergence of a new capitalist mode as a result from an external network system to an internal one (or vice versa) might enable the existing leader to decline and emerge at the same time. In such a moment, when a switch in the main modus operandus changes the dynam- ics of world system evolution, it is conceivable for the existing leader to develop dual and alternative (but to some degree complimentary) centers of systemic capabilities, causing the development of a diff erent form of “chaos” and allowing for the generation of a “phoenix cycle” of renewed leadership out of the ashes of its former status (for reasons laid out below). Th e process leading to the development of a systemic chaos as depicted in Figure 2 is normally driven by the clustering of innovations outside the current hegemon’s realm (both in a geographical and technological sense), paired with the technological diff usion of core leading sectors technologies (again in a broader sense) and the emergence of new leading sectors. Th is triggers the centralization of new systemic capabilities in one or two newly new centers, eventually causing the rise of a challenger (or challengers) to the existing systemic leader.²⁵ One of the main characteristics of systemic leadership transitions in most treatments of the subject seems to be the inability of the existing leader to estab- lish a similar leadership position in a newly emerging and structurally diff er- ent commercial and organizational arrangement. Th is shift in the geographical and political location of power has been explained as the outcome of the leader’s experience of success in the current setting, creating an entrenched institutional setting (in a broader sense) that proves adaptive in defending its turf but less so in fostering the rise of new leading sectors. However, the case of Britain’s con- tinued leadership over an extended period of time (and separate long waves) has shown that this is not always the case. In the previous occurrence of a switch from one network system to another— as a result from the change in the type of capitalist mode of “global web weav- ing” (commercial maritime, industrial, and digital commercial) dominating the global system to a new one—we have witnessed a phenomenon here referred to as the phoenix cycle.²⁶ In instances where the systemic chaos is not only driven Two types of challengers have to be diff erentiated: catch-up challengers that aim to challenge the existing leader in the same “tracks”—staying with Arrighi’s metaphor—but with highly improved machinery aiming to overtake the leader on its own tracks. A second kind of challenger, however, aims to overtake the old leader on an all-together new “set of tracks” as a result of its innovative new means, both in technological and organizational terms and aiming to tackle global problems in a new commercial and organizational arrangement.²³ After the breakdown of the old arrangement results in a systemic chaos (equivalent to Modelski and Th ompson’s deligitimation phase), the process of global warfare provides the macrodecision that triggers the rise of a new leader, so far always of the second “track-changing” kind, who reinforces the transformation of the world system through its institutional manifestation (push factor) of the new “tech- nological paradigm” (Perez 1983: 2002) and experiences further reinforcement through the emulation of leader by other states during this phase (pull factor). So far, we have witnessed one occurrence of hegemonic and systemic transi- tion (as understood in our model), where the existing leader (Britain) was aiming to maintain and strengthen its leadership, and are currently experiencing a simi- lar transition.²⁴ It is this co-occurrence of hegemonic and systemic transition that allows for the development of what we term the “phoenix cycle” of renewed hegemonic leadership. the phoenix cycle In contrast to Arrighi’s argument that the emergence of a capitalist mode (based on the old one, but qualitatively diff erent and novel)—identifi ed in Figure 2 as “systemic change”—always seems to fall together with the rise of ²³. A necessary and more thorough discussion of the challenger process is unfortu- nately beyond the scope of this paper. We refer for the closest discussion of our under- standing of the challenger process to the treatment of this issue in Rasler and Th ompson (). Similar to Arrighi, Rasler and Th ompson view the divide between territorially- based and maritime-commercial powers as a crucial divide, and identifi es three major challenging strategies, the capture-the-center strategy, an attack on the global network and/or the creation of an alternative network, and carving-out-a-subsystem strategy. In their challenger model of global leadership they thus emphasize the factors of maritime- commercial orientation, proximity, similarity, and innovativeness of the challenger in comparison with the challenged leader. ²⁴. Th e discussion, as to why China (or rather Chinese leaders) decided against the expansion of their lead during the fi rst occurrence of the co-occurrence of a hegemonic- and systemic crisis is beyond the realm of this work but increasingly receives more atten- tion in the literature. ²⁵. A more detailed discussion of this process has been put forward in Rennstich (b); for a discussion on the various defi nitions in this context, see Rapkin (), also Goldstein (, especially chaps.  and ). ²⁶. For a discussion on the eff ect of these types on rivalries between great powers, see Rennstich (b). For a similar account, see Cantwell (; see also e.g., Levathes ; Pomeranz ; for an alternative account, see Frank ), who distinguishes between “merchant capitalism” (pre-s), “industrial capitalism” (s–s), and “global capitalism” (post–s). Joachim Karl Rennstich230 Chaos or ReOrder?  by the “normal” process of hegemonic crisis and breakdown (see Figure 2), but also coincides with a systemic crisis (emerging out of the rising complexity of the system), the existing leader can defend its leadership position in the transform- ing world system. Th is shift is triggered by a change in the major socio-economic interaction mode of the system, leading to a shift in the system meta-structure (the “web-weaving”). Only if the parallel development of a new cluster of innova- tions and the rise of new leading sectors can occur within its domain, may the existing leader extend its leadership position (see Figure 2). As shown by a number of authors²⁷ from various research traditions, past success often entails the very ingredients for future demise. Whereas continu- ous innovation still takes place within the existing leader, adaptation to a newly emerging, changed environment (as a result of the rise of new leading sectors else- where) proves very hard for a society that can (and usually does) become locked into economic practices and institutions that in the past proved so successful. Powerful vested interests resist change, especially in circumstances when a nation is so powerful as to institutionalize its commercial and organizational arrange- ment on a global level, a change direly needed however to maintain its leadership. Gilpin (1996: 413) thus concludes that “a national system of political economy most ‘fi t’ and effi cient in one era of technology and market demand is very likely to be ‘unfi t’ in a succeeding age of new technologies and new demands.” Th e cyclical emergence of new commercial and organizational arrange- ments as shown by Modelski and Th ompson, Freeman, and others entails such an environmental change. Th us, hegemonic transitions usually involve the shift from one leader to another due to what Boswell (1999) calls the “advantage of backwardness.” If we view the emergence of new commercial and organizational arrangements as a largely endogenous process, its emergence also causes an envi- ronmental shift that can be understood as an exogenous factor as well. However, the response of the existing leader to this change is largely driven by endogenous factors again. Th e same can be said for the change from one socio-economic interaction mode to another, setting off the transition from an internal network structure system to an external network-structured one (and vice versa). It is the set of leading sectors (an endogenous process) that causes—over time—the change of the systemic structure and thus a change of the meaning of “fi tness” in the evolu- tionary selection process. Th e shift from one modus operandus to another, then, is also both an endogenous but to some degree an exogenous process. back to the future? hegemony renewed One of the main obstacles for any existing hegemon historically has been the entrenchment of its own success. Th e institutionalization of its successful strate- gies creates powerful incentives to “remain on course.” Th ese institutions prove not only to be “sticky” (in the sense that they outlast their original intent and aim to preserve the existing order rather than adapt to change) but also defensive. New ways of doing things are thus less likely to emerge where such entrenched resistance exists, a phenomenon we can observe both on the micro- (individuals and fi rms) and macro-level (states). Crucial factors we have to take into account are the kinds of global problems the actors are trying to address. In a systemic environment that is driven by the same capitalistic mode, these problématiques will be more closely connected than in a situation in which the power strategy is based on two diff erent capitalistic modes. It is important to keep in mind that the two network systems—internal or external—are refl ective of diff erent power strategies. Th e rise of a new com- mercial and organizational arrangement refl ective of a diff erent network envi- ronment provides less of a threat to the existing entrenched order and thus will be met with less resistance. We know that the emergence of new leading sectors is a path-dependent process. Leading sectors of a new network environment are products of a diff er- ent path than that of the existing commercial and organizational arrangement (despite their co-existence and often to some degree parallel historical trajecto- ries). Originating in diff erent power-logics, they can be quite complimentary in their development, as Nef has shown: [T]he commercial revolution…had a continuous inf luence reaching back to the Reformation upon industrial technology and the scale of mining and manufacturing. But so, in turn, the progress of industry had continuously stimulated in a variety of ways the progress of commerce. The former was quite as “revolutionary” as the latter, and quite as directly responsible for the “Industrial Revolution.” (Nef : ) Th is “compatibility” or even complimentary character is to a large degree the result of not only the diff erence in power strategies but also the diff erence in commercial strategies. External network arrangements tend to be service-ori- ented (in today’s economic language) whereas internal network systems tend to be production-focused (see also the discussion above on the diff erence between internal and network systems). ²⁷. See e.g., Christensen (); Gilpin (); Freeman and Louçã (); Freeman and Soete (); Freeman and Perez (); Porter (); Nelson and Winter (). Joachim Karl Rennstich232 Chaos or ReOrder?  Th us, in the same manner as the commercial supremacy of Britain helped it to build up its industrial strength, the U.S. informational technologies and digital networking capabilities are based upon the strength of its earlier strengths in an internal network environment (i.e., microelectronics, mass production, aerospace technologies, and semiconductor production). As a result, the parallel development of two centers of systemic capabilities—one rooted in the external network power logic, the other in the internal network power—is not only pos- sible but also complimentary and self-reinforcing. Another argument regularly put forward for the likely rise of a new hegemon is the notion of capital “searching” for new and better opportunities (i.e., higher returns as a result of new monopoly rents). For reasons laid out above, these opportunities tend to arise outside of the institutionalized setting of the existing leader. Th is process usually leads to the fl ow of capital from the existing leader to the rising new one. However, in the case of a systemic network structure shift and thus the possible development of dual centers within the same “containers of power” (Giddens 1987), these capital fl ows can (as in the case of Britain during its transition from an external network to an internal network power logic) remain internal and simply shift from one center to another but within the realms of the existing leader. We are witnessing a similar process currently in the case of the United States where not only internal fl ows are switching from an internal network power logic to opportunities arising in the emerging external network power logic driven enterprises but also external fl ows are signifi cant for the rise of this new commer- cial and organizational arrangement. Th is does not only take place in the form of “venture-capital” fi nancing, but also to a much larger degree in a shift from established institutions of capital distribution to newer forms. Put diff erently, in the case of a combined hegemonic and systemic breakdown, the old hegemonic leader re-emerges out of the ashes of its crumbling old commercial and organi- zational arrangement fed by the internal fl ows of its monetary capital (as well as that from others) and as a result is able to develop dual centers of systemic capa- bility. Th e current co-development of dual fi nancial centers within the United States may serve as an example of the continuation of this process. Th us, instead of a disadvantage, the declining leader can use its existing institutional setting and capabilities not only to defend its predominance of the current commercial and organizational arrangement. At the same time it can facilitate these capabilities to its advantage by channeling the increasingly liquid capital fl ows not outside, but rather to the parallel developing new center of sys- temic capability. Th e ashes of its hegemonic decline prove to be fruitful in nur- turing the rising new center. Th is does not prevent the rise of challengers. And it does not preclude the further unraveling of the existing order leading to a hege- monic breakdown. However, the unique circumstances of a combined systemic and hegemonic transition provide the old leader with a signifi cant head start in the development of its capabilities in the newly emerging system for reasons laid out above. summary Th e model presented here of world (and ultimately global) system devel- opment as an evolutionary process and the transitions of hegemonic leadership characterizing this systemic development hopes to achieve two main objectives. First, we hope to demonstrate the need to employ the “big picture” for a frame of reference when it comes to questions of global governance. Th e evolutionary character of the global system formation makes it essential to base one’s obser- vations of relatively current developments into the frame of references of the more long-term processes of global system formation. Th erefore, we can identify the industrialization phase for what it is: an aberration of the general mode of web-weaving of the global system rather than the nucleus of a globalized world economy. As a result, we have a much clearer picture as to what constitutes “hegemony” in a world that is characterized by an increased level of complexity, however also by an emphasis on external network-control as the main “capitalist mode.” Hegemony in such an environment is based on the control of external network connections, rather than aiming for—futile—attempts to dominate wide-reaching internal network structures in a build-up of global “imperial webs.” Hegemony in a globalized human web as it exists today is therefore diff erent in character than previous forms of hegemony during the industrial phase, how- ever it is not rendered impossible or implausible. And the historical trajectory we can identify so far seems to follow that of the previous phoenix cycle with the emergence of dual centers of systemic capabilities within the domain of the old systemic leader. Second, this work aims to highlight the need for evolutionary models in the study of global governance issues regardless of the scale or questions involved. Th e interdependent, coevolving process of economic, political, social, and ulti- mately cultural dynamics that mark global system development cannot be fully grasped if analyzed in isolation. Acknowledging them as part of a larger system allows us to use the insights we have gained from more abstract models about system-development and system-behavior and tie them to seemingly uncon- nected areas of inquiry, such as the behavior of states, fi rms, or the role of tech- nology on social institutions, to name just a few. Joachim Karl Rennstich234 Chaos or ReOrder?  references Abu-Lughod, Janet L. . 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The End of the World as We Know It: Social Science for the Twenty- First Century. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press. Th ey’ve got Attack Helicopters We’ve got Mugs (and over 12,000 unique visits a month) JWSR needs your fi nancial contributions now more than ever. Proceeds are used for future publication of the Journal of World- Systems Research. Please help us by purchasing a JWSR Mug or making a donation today! store.jwsr.org http://store.jwsr.org Rennstich