I. Desoysa et al., TESTING POWER-TRANSITION THEORY USING ALTERNATIVE MEASURES OF NATIONAL CAPABILITIES, The Journal of conflict resolution, 41(4), 1997, pp. 509-528
There has been a long debate over whether peace is best preserved by a
balance or preponderance of power. Organski and Kugler suggested that
the dynamics of relative dyadic power matter most. Using GNP to measu
re national capabilities, they found support for their power-transitio
n theory, but only for states considered to be contenders for dominanc
e in the international system. Subsequently, Houweling and Siccama rep
orted important new evidence in support of the theory. They concluded
that power transitions are a potent predictor of war for all major pow
ers, not just a small subset; but it has been unclear whether their st
ronger results were a consequence of genuine improvements in methods,
the use of a different measure of power, or alterations to the list of
major powers. The authors replicate Houweling and Siccama's analysis
using the two most common, and recently revised, measures of national
capabilities-the Correlates of War composite index and GDP-and investi
gate the effects of modifying the set of major powers. They find subst
antial support for the power-transition theory, but the strength of th
e evidence depends importantly on how power is measured and the set of
cases analyzed.