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- Hegemonic_stability_theory abstract "Hegemonic stability theory (HST) is a theory of international relations, rooted in research from the fields of political science, economics, and history. HST indicates that the international system is more likely to remain stable when a single nation-state is the dominant world power, or hegemon. Thus, the fall of an existing hegemon or the state of no hegemon diminishes the stability of the international system. When a hegemon exercises leadership, either through diplomacy, coercion, or persuasion, it is actually deploying its "preponderance of power." This is called hegemony, which refers to a state's ability to "single-handedly dominate the rules and arrangements ...[of] international political and economic relations." HST can help analyze the rise of great powers to the role of world leader or hegemon, which have been ongoing since the 15th century. Also, it can be used to understand and to calculate the future of international politics through the discussion of the symbiotic relation between the declining hegemon and its rising successor.Research on hegemony can be divided into two schools of thought: the realist school and the systemic school. Each school can be further sub-divided. Two dominant theories have emerged from each school. What Robert Keohane first called the "theory of hegemonic stability," joins A. F. K. Organski's Power Transition Theory as the two dominant approaches to the realist school of thought. Long Cycle Theory, espoused by George Modelski, and World Systems Theory, espoused by Immanuel Wallerstein, have emerged as the two dominant approaches to the systemic school of thought.Charles P. Kindleberger is one of the scholars most closely associated with HST, and is even regarded by some as the father of HST. Kindleberger argued, in his 1973 book The World in Depression: 1929-1939, that the economic chaos between World War I and World War II that led to the Great Depression, can be blamed in part on the lack of a world leader with a dominant economy. The theory is about more than economics though: the central idea behind HST is that the stability of the global system, in terms of politics, international law, and so on, relies on the hegemon to develop and enforce the rules of the system.In addition to Kindleberger, key figures in the development of hegemonic stability theory include Modelski, Robert Gilpin, Robert Keohane, Stephen Krasner, and others.".
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- Hegemonic_stability_theory wikiPageWikiLink 1994_economic_crisis_in_Mexico.
- Hegemonic_stability_theory wikiPageWikiLink A._F._K._Organski.
- Hegemonic_stability_theory wikiPageWikiLink Anarchy.
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- Hegemonic_stability_theory wikiPageWikiLink Category:International_relations_theory.
- Hegemonic_stability_theory wikiPageWikiLink Category:Political_realism.
- Hegemonic_stability_theory wikiPageWikiLink Charles_P._Kindleberger.
- Hegemonic_stability_theory wikiPageWikiLink Economics.
- Hegemonic_stability_theory wikiPageWikiLink Enlightened_self-interest.
- Hegemonic_stability_theory wikiPageWikiLink Exxon_Valdez.
- Hegemonic_stability_theory wikiPageWikiLink George_Modelski.
- Hegemonic_stability_theory wikiPageWikiLink Global_system_cycle.
- Hegemonic_stability_theory wikiPageWikiLink Great_Depression.
- Hegemonic_stability_theory wikiPageWikiLink Hegemon.
- Hegemonic_stability_theory wikiPageWikiLink Hegemonic_stability_theory.
- Hegemonic_stability_theory wikiPageWikiLink Hegemony.
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- Hegemonic_stability_theory wikiPageWikiLink Immanuel_Wallerstein.
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- Hegemonic_stability_theory wikiPageWikiLink Long-cycles.
- Hegemonic_stability_theory wikiPageWikiLink Long_Cycle_Theory.
- Hegemonic_stability_theory wikiPageWikiLink Mexican_peso_crisis.
- Hegemonic_stability_theory wikiPageWikiLink Mexico.
- Hegemonic_stability_theory wikiPageWikiLink Nation-state.
- Hegemonic_stability_theory wikiPageWikiLink Nation_state.
- Hegemonic_stability_theory wikiPageWikiLink Neoliberalism_(international_relations).
- Hegemonic_stability_theory wikiPageWikiLink Neorealism_(international_relations).
- Hegemonic_stability_theory wikiPageWikiLink Political_realism.
- Hegemonic_stability_theory wikiPageWikiLink Political_science.
- Hegemonic_stability_theory wikiPageWikiLink Power_Transition_Theory.
- Hegemonic_stability_theory wikiPageWikiLink Power_transition_theory.
- Hegemonic_stability_theory wikiPageWikiLink Realism_(international_relations).
- Hegemonic_stability_theory wikiPageWikiLink Regime_theory.
- Hegemonic_stability_theory wikiPageWikiLink Robert_Gilpin.
- Hegemonic_stability_theory wikiPageWikiLink Robert_Keohane.
- Hegemonic_stability_theory wikiPageWikiLink Russia.
- Hegemonic_stability_theory wikiPageWikiLink Simon_Kuznets.
- Hegemonic_stability_theory wikiPageWikiLink Soft_Power.
- Hegemonic_stability_theory wikiPageWikiLink Soft_power.
- Hegemonic_stability_theory wikiPageWikiLink State-actors.
- Hegemonic_stability_theory wikiPageWikiLink State_actor.
- Hegemonic_stability_theory wikiPageWikiLink Stephen_D._Krasner.
- Hegemonic_stability_theory wikiPageWikiLink Stephen_Krasner.
- Hegemonic_stability_theory wikiPageWikiLink Susan_Strange.
- Hegemonic_stability_theory wikiPageWikiLink Thomas_J._McCormick.
- Hegemonic_stability_theory wikiPageWikiLink Washington_Consensus.
- Hegemonic_stability_theory wikiPageWikiLink World-systems_theory.
- Hegemonic_stability_theory wikiPageWikiLink World_Systems_Theory.
- Hegemonic_stability_theory wikiPageWikiLink World_War_I.
- Hegemonic_stability_theory wikiPageWikiLink World_War_II.
- Hegemonic_stability_theory wikiPageWikiLinkText "Hegemonic stability theory".
- Hegemonic_stability_theory wikiPageWikiLinkText "Hegemonic stability theory#Competing theories of hegemonic stability".
- Hegemonic_stability_theory wikiPageWikiLinkText "hegemonic stability theory".
- Hegemonic_stability_theory wikiPageWikiLinkText "hegemonic stability".
- Hegemonic_stability_theory wikiPageWikiLinkText "political stability".
- Hegemonic_stability_theory hasPhotoCollection Hegemonic_stability_theory.
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- Hegemonic_stability_theory subject Category:International_relations_theory.
- Hegemonic_stability_theory subject Category:Political_realism.
- Hegemonic_stability_theory hypernym Theory.
- Hegemonic_stability_theory type Article.
- Hegemonic_stability_theory type Book.
- Hegemonic_stability_theory type Article.
- Hegemonic_stability_theory type Relation.
- Hegemonic_stability_theory comment "Hegemonic stability theory (HST) is a theory of international relations, rooted in research from the fields of political science, economics, and history. HST indicates that the international system is more likely to remain stable when a single nation-state is the dominant world power, or hegemon. Thus, the fall of an existing hegemon or the state of no hegemon diminishes the stability of the international system.".
- Hegemonic_stability_theory label "Hegemonic stability theory".
- Hegemonic_stability_theory sameAs Teoría_de_estabilidad_hegemónica.
- Hegemonic_stability_theory sameAs Théorie_de_la_stabilité_hégémonique.
- Hegemonic_stability_theory sameAs יציבות_הגמונית.
- Hegemonic_stability_theory sameAs Teori_kestabilan_hegemon.
- Hegemonic_stability_theory sameAs 覇権安定論.
- Hegemonic_stability_theory sameAs Teoria_da_estabilidade_hegemônica.
- Hegemonic_stability_theory sameAs m.04qr72.
- Hegemonic_stability_theory sameAs Q3029538.
- Hegemonic_stability_theory sameAs Q3029538.
- Hegemonic_stability_theory wasDerivedFrom Hegemonic_stability_theory?oldid=673833322.
- Hegemonic_stability_theory isPrimaryTopicOf Hegemonic_stability_theory.