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Rational Hegemons, Excludable Goods, and Small Groups: An Epitaph for Hegemonic Stability Theory?

World Politics, 1989
In defining international free trade as a public good, “hegemonic stability theory” posited early in the 1970s that its reliable supply depended upon a distribution of international power analogous to that within a privileged group. More recently, however, critics have challenged three assumptions fundamental to hegemonic theory: its premises of free ...
Joanne Gowa
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Hegemonic Power and Stability

1997
Abstract All three major schools of IPE thought discuss hegemonic power and its consequences. Unlike rational choice analysis, however, the idea of hegemony is not grounded in a particular paradigm; consideration of hegemony does not necessarily entail acceptance of a particular set of theoretical assumptions.
George T Crane, Abla Amawi
exaly   +2 more sources

Reputation and Hegemonic Stability: A Game-Theoretic Analysis

American Political Science Review, 1988
We develop and explicate a game-theoretic model in which repeated play, incomplete information, and reputation are major elements. A significant advance of this model is the way it represents cooperation under incomplete information among rational actors of different sizes.
James E. Alt   +2 more
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Hegemonic stability theory and 19th century tariff levels in Europe

International Organization, 1983
Although the theory of hegemonic stability has attracted an impressive array of adherents, current formulations leave many conceptual issues unresolved. Existing formulations also fail to draw from the theory any implications concerning the process by which a hegemonic state creates and maintains a regime.
T. McKeown
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The Systemic Influence of U.S. Monetary Hegemony and Hegemonic Stability Theory Reassessed

Sungshin Women's University Center for East Asian Studies
The current international monetary system has been dominated by ‘hegemonic instability,’ stemming from U.S. policies and financial market dynamics. By acting as a ‘reluctant hegemon’ that prioritizes domestic objectives over international stability since the collapse of the Bretton Woods system in the early 1970s, the U.S.
Jaehwan Jung
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Hegemonic Stability Theory:

Allies, Adversaries, and International Trade, 2020
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