Academic literature on the topic 'Declive del hegemón'

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Journal articles on the topic "Declive del hegemón"

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Morales Ruvalcaba, Daniel. "Ciclos políticos hegemónicos: implicaciones para la gobernanza internacional." Brazilian Journal of International Relations 7, no. 3 (2018): 452–93. http://dx.doi.org/10.36311/2237-7743.2018.v7n3.03.p452.

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El hegemón es un actor fundamental en la gobernanza internacional. No obstante, mientras que el comercio, poder y guerra han sido temas ampliamente abordados desde los estudios sobre hegemonía en las Relaciones Internacionales, se ha avanzado poco en análisis de las ideas que orientan el comportamiento del hegemón. La hipótesis aquí planteada es que las hegemonías recorren a lo largo de su existencia cinco fases (emergencia, despliegue, apogeo, declive y extinción) y, durante cada una de ellas, el Estado hegemónico asume ideologías específicas que orientan su comportamiento internacional, lo cual se traduce en la promoción de ciertas políticas internacionales, así como de alianzas y organizaciones internacionales con vocaciones específicas. Sin embargo, en la medida que evoluciona su poder nacional y el hegemón transita de una fase a otra, éste tiende a cambiar ideológicamente, abandonando ideas previas y asumiendo otras nuevas. Si bien dicha transición ideológica es pragmática -en función de las necesidades de su poder nacional- este cambio resulta discordante y criticable por otros actores del sistema. Este documento se compone de dos grandes partes: en la primera se establecen las cinco fases de un ciclo hegemónico y, luego, se exponen las ideologías que orientan el comportamiento del Estado hegemónico en ellas; la segunda parte se orienta a comprobar empíricamente las transiciones ideológicas durante las hegemonías neerlandesa, británica y estadounidense.
 
 Abstract: The hegemon is a fundamental actor in international governance. However, while trade, power and war have been topics widely discussed from studies on hegemony in International Relations, little progress has been made in analyzing the ideas that guide the behavior of the hegemon. The hypothesis proposed here is that the hegemonies pass through five phases during their existence (emergence, deployment, apogee, decline and extinction) and, during each of them, the hegemonic State assumes specific ideologies that guide its international behavior. However, as the national power evolves, and the hegemon moves from one phase to another, it tends to change ideologically, abandoning previous ideas and assuming new ones. Although this ideological transition is pragmatic - depending on the power needs of the hegemon- this change results discordant and is criticized by other actors in the system. To demonstrate this, the following document is composed of two major parts: the first presents the five phases of a hegemonic cycle and, along with it, the ideologies that guide the behavior of the hegemonic State; the second part aims to empirically verify the ideological transitions during the hegemonies that have existed: the Dutch, the British and the American.
 Keywords: Hegemony, hegemonic political cycles, ideology, national power, hegemonic interregnum.
 
 
 Recebido em: Agosto/2018.
 Aprovado em: Dezembro/2018.
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Estenssoro, Saavedra Jaime Fernando. "América Latina frente a la creciente tensión entre China y EE.UU.: ¿Hacia dónde va el mundo?" Revista do CEAM 5, no. 1 (2019): 43–58. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3251498.

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En este artículo se plantea que está ocurriendo un cambio estructural en el orden internacional, señalado por el declive de la hegemonía de los Estados Unidos. Declive que comenzó en los años setenta del siglo XX y que se ha acentuado en lo que va corrido de este siglo XXI, producto del ascenso de China como potencia global de primer orden. La llegada de Donald Trump a la presidencia de los EE.UU., es una manifestación coyuntural de este fenómeno estructural. El intento por detener y revertir este declive de la hegemonía estadounidense explica las políticas económicas proteccionistas de Trump, así como la creciente tensión que se manifiesta entre China y EE.UU. Este escenario debe ser profundamente evaluado en América Latina, debido a que, si bien su economía depende de manera creciente del mercado chino, por otra parte, los EE.UU., aún ven a esta región como su "patio trasero".
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TAIRA, KOJI. "Japan, an Imminent Hegemon?" ANNALS of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 513, no. 1 (1991): 151–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0002716291513001013.

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Japan has been thrust into a leading role in world affairs by its own economic success and by the confluence of two powerful global trends: (1) hegemonic cycles that anticipate the rise of a new hegemon as a consequence of the relative decline of the United States, and (2) the end of history itself, which revolutionizes the meaning of hegemony and international order. Japan's hegemonic qualifications are examined with respect to economic resources by which to finance hegemony and its ability and will to lead the world. Japanese-style hegemony is inferred from the known characteristics of government-business relations in Japan and evaluated in the context of U.S.-Japanese relations. It is concluded that the Pax Americana is hardly dead and that Japan finds it more advantageous to fit into modified American hegemony than to go it alone by replacing America as a new hegemon.
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Ökten, Nilay, and Meral Balcı. "An Assessment of Neoliberal Coups: the 1973 Chilean Military Coup and the 1980 Turkish Military Coup." Governance and Politics 1, no. 1 (2022): 8–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.24833/2782-7062-2022-1-1-8-28.

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The article attempts to identify the changes caused by military coups, one of the means of spreading neoliberal ideology, on the political economy of countries and discusses the place of the US hegemony in this context. The influence of armies on the political economy of countries is examined based on the examples of the Chilean military coup of 1973 and the Turkish military coup of 1980, and the place of the army element in the histories of these countries is discussed. Even if a hegemon power has enough economic, military and political power to intervene directly, it can use less costly and more legitimate tools for indirect intervention than a direct one. The policy of instrumentalizing local military forces and exporting neoliberalism to countries, which the US hegemony preferred to apply in the Cold War era and generally in the last quarter of the 20th century, is clearly seen in the examples of Chile and Turkey. Therefore, the main topic of this study is the use of armies as a tool by the neoliberal hegemon USA, and it argues that the military coups of Chile and Turkey were indirect foreign interventions, and that they were the products of the US hegemony as events that served to declare the victory of neoliberalism.
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Chase-Dunn, Christopher, Andrew K. Jorgenson, Thomas E. Reifer, and Shoon Lio. "The Trajectory of the United States in the World-System: A Quantitative Reflection." Sociological Perspectives 48, no. 2 (2005): 233–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/sop.2005.48.2.233.

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Using improved estimates of world and country GDPs, population, and GDP per capita published by Angus Maddison (2001), we report findings of a quantitative study of the trajectory of the United States in world historical perspective. We compare the U.S. economic hegemony of the twentieth century with the seventeenth-century Dutch hegemony and the British hegemony of the nineteenth century. We also track the trajectories of challengers and discuss the future of hegemonic rivalry and global governance. Our findings support the existence of a sequence of hegemonic rises and declines. Despite a recent plateau in the decline of U.S. economic hegemony, we contend that the United States will continue to decline.
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Khojayan, Karine. "Reflections on the Transformation of the World Order: Emerging Trends and Impending Perspectives." Journal of Political Science: Bulletin of Yerevan University 1, no. 2 (2022): 92–105. http://dx.doi.org/10.46991/jops/2022.1.2.092.

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The article analyzes the latest trends of the started process of transformation of world order, trying to explain it by various concepts, bringing forward by researchers and scientists, substantiating for many decades the urgent need for the existence of a dominant state - a hegemon which plays a role of a stabilizer of the international relations. The article focuses on the concept of hegemonic stability, arguing that existence of hegemon especially in the political and economic system is a necessary condition for maintaining global peace and stability. 
 Special attention is paid to the conditions that contribute to the decline of hegemony. Drawing parallels between today's realities and the concepts, highlighted by Charles Kindleberger, Robert Gilpin, Immanuel Wallerstein and other researchers, the article proves that even based on the concepts of the mentioned researchers who for many years justified the “stabilizing role” of the US hegemony, after the global fanatical crisis of 2008 a new phase of development is becoming more and more noticeable. Referring to the point of view of I. Wallerstein, the article concludes that even maintaining dominance to a certain extent in a number of areas, such as military, political, the unipolar world order has already gone down in history.
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Kasantzev, A. A., and V. M. Sergeev. "The Crisis of US-centric Globalization: Causes, Trends and Scenarios of Development." MGIMO Review of International Relations 13, no. 2 (2020): 40–69. http://dx.doi.org/10.24833/2071-8160-2020-2-71-40-69.

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Traditionally the processes of globalization and the issues of world politics related to hegemony are studied separately in the scientific literature. In this article the authors propose the synthesis of both of these approaches based on the model of transactional and innovative economy spatially structured as a system of “global gateways”. The globalization is conceived in the article as a process of reinforcement of network connections of different parts of the globe. The network is distributed unevenly around the world. The increase of globalization processes stimulates the strengthening of the network interactions and saturation of it with resources. The decline of the globalization we are witnessing at the moment results in the weakening of network relations. Spatial heterogeneity of globalization produces inequality in resource distribution on social as well as regional and country level. Due to this fact the system of global economy based on these gateways requires the stability of political institutes. In the 19th-20th centuries the system of maintenance of global stability (known in IR as hegemonic stability) was established. Increasing globalization provides the effective interaction between economic and political spheres. Declining globalization produces a gap between gateways’ demands for political stability and a hegemon’s ability to provide it. Recently the USA’s abilities as global hegemon have shrunk dramatically in relative terms as well as American electorate’s willingness to bear the costs of hegemony. Washington is unable to maintain stable functioning of “the rules of the game” neither separately, nor with its allies. This situation may be described as “the crisis of US-centric globalization”. The crisis of globalization relates to decline of international regimes, rise of uncertainty and conflicts on all levels of world politics. Presumably, it’s a long-term process. And at the end it may cause the establishment of new political form of economic globalization (e.g. transition to the model of hegemony of a group of superpowers, a scenario mostly close to generally accepted in Russia idea of multi-polar world), or emergence of a new hegemon (e.g. China).
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Sánchez, Rodríguez Lilianne. "Factores determinantes del declive relativo de la hegemonía de Estados Unidos. Su impacto en las relaciones interamericanas contemporáneas." Política Internacional VI, . 2 (2024): 74–90. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10855903.

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Este artículo identifica y explica los factores fundamentales del declive relativo de la hegemonía de los Estados Unidos de América en el sistema internacional de Estados: la agudización de las contradicciones inherentes del sistema capitalista; la polarización de su política doméstica; la pérdida de confianza en su gobierno; el decrecimiento económico; la pérdida de cuotas de influencia, incluido por el ascenso de potencias emergentes, como China, o de bloques como el BRICS; el rechazo abrumador al orden internacional actual y los intentos por contrarrestar la hegemonía del dólar. Se ejemplifican las áreas en las que se evidencia la disminución del poderío estadounidense. Se analiza como su impacto más visible, el ascenso de China en la región de América Latina y el Caribe. A modo de conclusión queda recogido que el declive relativo de la hegemonía de EE.UU. no significa que esta ha llegado a su fin. El ascenso de China y los BRICS como nuevos actores emergentes no amenaza la hegemonía de EE.UU. en la región. De lo que se trata, a largo plazo, es de un cambio más acentuado en la correlación internacional de fuerzas, que se expresará en una nueva distribución del poder en el hemisferio occidental.
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Williams, Gregory P. "A Critique of Deep Engagement, the Social Narrative of US Foreign Policy." European Review of International Studies 11, no. 2 (2024): 248–74. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/21967415-11020003.

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Abstract This article offers a critical perspective of the discourse of deep engagement that portrays the United States as the world’s necessary or indispensable power. It describes deep engagement as a social narrative that, like literary narratives, has a story, a plot and an argument. This narrative has persisted in a time of waning hegemony because it makes an apparently appealing moral case for American global leadership. Yet deep engagement remains flawed from a strategic perspective and disregards the history of great-power rise and decline. From a strategic perspective, while hegemons describe their leadership in moral terms, their rhetoric is often betrayed by their actions. From a historical perspective, while hegemons regard their own efforts and values as instrumental to their status, their rise can be credited to a wave of economic and political forces the state cannot control.
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Simons, Greg. "West vs. Non-West: A New Cold War?" Transatlantic Policy Quarterly 21, no. 4 (2023): 117–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.58867/gxdg4139.

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There is a noticeable and growing evolution of the global geopolitical balance of power and influence in the 21st century’s system of international relations. The current hegemon, the unipolar United States, and the political system of Western liberalism that supports it, is under great strain and is in a state of relative decline. The challenger is a non-Western-centric multipolar order, which consists of a wide variety of countries spanning the globe, including what is referred to as the Global South. This ‘crisis’ of the Western order has prompted a tangible and informational response from the U.S. and its system, to defend their privileged hegemony and to deter the rise of alternative systems of power and influence in international relations.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Declive del hegemón"

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Slaten, Kevin. "The decline of U.S. hegemony regaining international consent /." Connect to resource, 2008. http://hdl.handle.net/1811/31784.

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Nye, Jeremy C. "The Thatcher era: economic decline and electoral hegemony." Thesis, Virginia Tech, 1987. http://hdl.handle.net/10919/45920.

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<p>The reelection of Mrs Thatcher's Conservative Government to a third term of office in June 1987 was remarkable and deserves repeated and in depth analysis. The performance of the government, and <i>Thatcherism</i> need to be seen in terms of their success in reversing Britain's relative economic decline. How have its policies sought to break the pattern of decline? Has it adopted a consistent, and distinctive approach? Is the party's unprecedented electoral success a product of its economic policies? What does the future hold?</p> <p> The following elements are crucial. The government has made its most important efforts in two main areas- towards the unions, and towards the fostering of the service sector of the economy. These policies, described in detail, have been important politically, and electorally (two terms which have different meanings and ramifications for the government). They are not, however, policies which are likely to provide the third Thatcher administration with automatic support in years to come. Recent accounts of the third victory have failed to recognize the precariousness of the Conservative government's position, in part exacerbated by the nature of the interests fostered the financial sector may prove to be an electoral liability, instead of an asset as before. The paper suggests that the ability of the government to win successive elections is evidence of the salience of factors which are often overlooked in political economy papers. The importance of expectations particularly in election year, of macro-economic variables controlled, to some extent, by the government, such as tax rates, and the relative unimportance of factors such as unemployment and inflation are also revealed by the Thatcher record.</p><br>Master of Arts
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Breton, Steven Daniel. "Imperial sunset, grand strategies of hegemons in relative decline." Thesis, National Library of Canada = Bibliothèque nationale du Canada, 1997. http://www.collectionscanada.ca/obj/s4/f2/dsk2/ftp03/MQ29532.pdf.

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Breton, Steven Daniel. "Imperial sunset : grand strategies of hegemons in relative decline." Thesis, McGill University, 1996. http://digitool.Library.McGill.CA:80/R/?func=dbin-jump-full&object_id=26724.

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This thesis investigates the economic and military policies hegemons pursue while experiencing relative decline. Based upon the rising costs of leadership associated with hegemony, this thesis establishes that both systemic and domestic environments equally influence the hegemon's policy-making. Furthermore, the paper contends that hegemons do practice strategic planning during relative decline, in an effort to adjust its commitments and resources to the environment. Relative success or failure in maintaining the international system and thus adjusting for decline depends on how decision-makers compensate for two prevailing variables: threat of challengers and availability of allies. This study offers a predictive theoretical model for interpreting the dynamics of grand strategy formulation, compensating for the influences of the domestic environment three historical case studies, the Dutch Republic, Britain and the United States, test the accuracy and validity of the model. This thesis finds that periods of strong leadership, void of threat, while augmented by external balancing best support a hegemon's relative decline.
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Silva, O. S. "The apogee and decline of British hegemony in Portugal, 1807-1820." Thesis, University of Southampton, 1985. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.356721.

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Kocak, Yunus Emre. "Power And Decline In The British And American Hegemonies: A Wallersteinian Analysis." Master's thesis, METU, 2006. http://etd.lib.metu.edu.tr/upload/12607960/index.pdf.

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The concept of hegemony has been an important subject in the 1970s as the US hegemonic position has entered into a decline period. This study aims to underline that the ongoing decline of US hegemony shares substantial analogies with the decline of British hegemony in the late 19th century. As the hegemonic economy enters into contraction period, it starts to experience financial expansion. Today, the US hegemony is in the midst of such an orientation toward the financialization. The study analyzes the historical changes within both hegemonic cases by direct references to the world-system theory and construct a comparative perspective in production, commerce and finance domains respectively to support these arguments.
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Toppo, Dante R. "The Tragedy of American Supremacy." Scholarship @ Claremont, 2015. http://scholarship.claremont.edu/cmc_theses/1141.

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Why has the United States, given its status as the sole remaining superpower following its Cold War victory, been unable to translate its preponderance of power into the outcomes it desires? The system established by the United States over the course of the Cold War does not effectively translate its power into influence in the post-Cold War world. In fact, the way US-Soviet competition shaped global affairs created systemic problems, weak and failing states, terrorism, autocracy and human rights abuse, that cannot be solved by the mechanisms of influence the US relied upon to win the Cold War. However, precisely these issues now dominate the American foreign policy agenda as its strategic objective shifted from defeating communism to maintaining the stability of the liberal world order that resulted from communism’s defeat. The United States, reliant on Cold War era mechanisms of influence, lacks the tools to accomplish these new objectives because these mechanisms were designed to exploit or accept the problems of statehood that now plague the liberal world order. Therefore, for the United States to make effective use of its abundance of power, it must either change its tools or its objectives.
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Briggs, Chris. "Rise and fall of the ACTU : maturation, hegemony and decline." Thesis, 1999. http://hdl.handle.net/2123/1596.

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Books on the topic "Declive del hegemón"

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Jonathan, Friedman, and Chase-Dunn Christopher K, eds. Hegemonic decline: Present and past. Paradigm Publishers, 2005.

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Jonathan, Friedman, and Chase-Dunn Christopher K, eds. Hegemonic decline: Present and past. Paradigm Publishers, 2005.

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O’Keefe, Thomas Andrew. Bush II, Obama, and the Decline of U.S. Hegemony in the Western Hemisphere. Routledge, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315113197.

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Ray, Indrajit. Decline of British Industrial Hegemony. Taylor & Francis Group, 2022.

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Pax Americana?: Hegemony or decline. Pluto Press, 1994.

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Hildebrandt, Reinhard. Us Hegemony: Global Ambitions and Decline. Lang Publishing, Incorporated, Peter, 2010.

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Hegemonic Decline: Present and Past (Political Economy of the World-System Annuals). Paradigm Publishers, 2004.

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Colgan, Jeff D. Partial Hegemony. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780197546376.001.0001.

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When and why does international order change? Easy to take for granted, international governing arrangements shape our world. They allow us to eat food imported from other countries, live safely from nuclear war, travel to foreign cities, profit from our savings, and much else. New threats, including climate change and simmering US-China hostility, lead many to worry that the “liberal order,” or the US position within it, is at risk. Theorists often try to understand that situation by looking at other cases of great power decline, like the British Empire or even ancient Athens. Yet so much is different about those cases that we can draw only imperfect lessons from them. A better approach is to look at how the United States itself already lost much of its international dominance, in the 1970s, in the realm of oil. Only now, with several decades of hindsight, can we fully appreciate it. The experiences of that partial decline in American hegemony, and the associated shifts in oil politics, can teach us a lot about general patterns of international order. Leaders and analysts can apply those lessons when seeking to understand or design new international governing arrangements on topics ranging from climate change to peacekeeping, and nuclear proliferation to the global energy transition.
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Hardy, Alfredo Toro. America's Two Cold Wars: From Hegemony to Decline. Springer Singapore Pte. Limited, 2022.

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Paquin, Jonathan, and Justin Massie. America's Allies and the Decline of US Hegemony. Taylor & Francis Group, 2019.

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Book chapters on the topic "Declive del hegemón"

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Lieber, Robert J. "American decline." In America’s Allies and the Decline of U.S. Hegemony. Routledge, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429260124-2.

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Safranchuk, Ivan. "Globalisation and the Decline of Universalism." In Hegemony and World Order. Routledge, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003037231-4.

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Vucetic, Srdjan. "China’s counter-hegemony?" In America’s Allies and the Decline of U.S. Hegemony. Routledge, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429260124-3.

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O’Keefe, Thomas Andrew. "What Is Hegemony and When Has the United States of America Been a Hegemon?" In Bush II, Obama, and the Decline of U.S. Hegemony in the Western Hemisphere. Routledge, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315113197-1.

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Kim, Tai-Yoo, and Daeryoon Kim. "The Maturity and Decline of British Industrial Society." In The Secrets of Hegemony. Springer Singapore, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-10-4416-8_5.

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Folarin, Sheriff. "Hegemony in Decline: Causes and Costs." In Declining Hegemonical Foreign Policies of Nigeria. Springer Nature Switzerland, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-52175-1_7.

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Overbeek, Henk. "The rise and fall of British hegemony." In Global Capitalism and National Decline. Routledge, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003334378-3.

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Çınar, Kürşat. "Local dynamics behind the AKP hegemony." In The Decline of Democracy in Turkey. Routledge, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429259715-5.

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Ray, Indrajit. "Progress in Jute Processing." In The Decline of British Industrial Hegemony. Routledge, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003267249-5.

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Ray, Indrajit. "Major Industries in 1914–46." In The Decline of British Industrial Hegemony. Routledge, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003267249-8.

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Conference papers on the topic "Declive del hegemón"

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Duarte, Paulo. "Changes in the World Power: The United States within the New Balance of Power." In International Conference on Eurasian Economies. Eurasian Economists Association, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.36880/c06.01182.

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This article aims to analyse the behaviour of the United States as a world power. The working hypothesis is that the only superpower has become, nowadays, impotent, affected by a relative decline. However, this should be understood as something natural, since it has never happened that any society would permanently remain ahead of the others. We assume here that the use of the qualitative method, through the hermeneutic analysis is, certainly, the basic methodology used for this investigation. We will try to conclude that notwithstanding their relative decline, the USA will tend to remain, in the short and medium term, the only world superpower. It is recommended that further investigation must assign a special attention to China’s emergence and its consequences on the balance of world power, in particular with regard to the durability of American hegemony.
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Reports on the topic "Declive del hegemón"

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Soare, Sorina. Romanian populism and transnational political mobilization. European Center for Populism Studies (ECPS), 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.55271/rp0027.

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Once considered a partial exception to the recent diffusion of populism worldwide, Romania saw Radical Right populism return to Parliament in 2020. The Alliance for the Union of Romanians (AUR) successfully campaigned on a platform of defending the Christian faith, freedom, the traditional family, and the nation. Although the party was initially considered the result of individual entrepreneurship linked to its founding leaders, it has successfully built on diffused networks of societal activism whose origins could be traced back to the early 2000s. However, the AUR’s track record of discourse aligned with Kremlin rhetoric calling for Western economic, political and cultural hegemony to be resisted and rolled back saw a temporary decline in voters’ support for the party. However, the party managed to rebuild consensus strategically by drawing on voters’ increased anxiety regarding the economic effects of the war. This report offers a cogent analysis of the political performance of the AUR, examining the party’s formative phase as well as its evolution since 2020, alongside a discussion of the impact of the war in Ukraine on Romanian party politics.
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