Structural balance of alliance and rivalry networks in international relations
Koji Oishi, Kentaro Sakuwa

TL;DR
This study examines how international alliance and rivalry networks evolve over time, testing the structural balance theory from 1816 to 2009, and finds that historical events influence the network's structural dynamics.
Contribution
It provides empirical evidence on the long-term evolution of interstate networks and highlights the impact of major historical events on structural balance mechanisms.
Findings
Structural balance theory explains network evolution before 1871 and after 1945.
The pattern of alliances and rivalries varies across different historical periods.
International networks offer new insights into signed network evolution mechanisms.
Abstract
Does the enemy of my enemy become my friend? A growing literature on structural analysis of interstate relationships has tackled this old question from the network perspective. However, the mechanism of long-term change in the structure of cooperation and enmity has yet to be fully understood. In search for a general explanation for the long-term evolution of interstate structure, we empirically examine the structural balance theory which predicts that a signed network evolves toward a more "balanced" structure where in many triangular relationships (i.e., triads) two states tend to share a common enemy or three states cooperate with each other. We investigate the network of alliances (positive edges) and rivalries (negative edges) between sovereign states and examine whether its evolution from 1816 to 2009 can be explained by the structural balance theory. We find the consistency with…
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Taxonomy
TopicsComplex Network Analysis Techniques
