Acronyms

HST

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HSTHawaiian Standard Time (GMT-1030)
HSTHealth Sciences and Technology
HSTHarmonized Sales Tax (Canada)
HSTHubble Space Telescope
HSTHealth Systems Trust
HSTHarry S. Truman
HSTHigh School Transcript (education)
HSTHunter S. Thompson (writer)
HSTHastings
HSTHigh Speed Train
HSTHoist
HSTHawaiian Standard Time
HSTHosting
HSTHistory Host
HSTHydrostatic Transmission
HSTHegemonic Stability Theory (international relations)
HSTHighland School of Technology (Gastonia, NC)
HSTHeat Shrink Tubing
HSTHome Sleep Testing
HSTHigh-Speed Technology (Modem)
HSTHigh Speed Technology
HSTHealth Services Team (various locations)
HSTHumane Society of Tulsa (Tulsa, OK)
HSTHuman Services Today (journal)
HSTHenkilön Sähköinen Tunnistaminen
HSTHigher Surgical Training (medical)
HSTHelicopter Support Team
HSTHeat Soak Test (treatment to convert Nickel Sulphide in tempered glass)
HSTHealth and Safety Technician
HSTHistory/Host (File Name Extension)
HSTHypersonic Transport
HSTHenkel Surface Technologies (India)
HSTHalf Season Ticket (football games; UK)
HSTHistory Speaks Today
HSTHuman Subjects Training (clinical studies)
HSTHippo Site Toolkit
HSTHaggard School of Theology (Azusa Pacific University; California)
HSTHome-Station Training
HSTHigh Starting Torque (expansion valve)
HSTHorse Shoe Tear (eye injury)
HSTHostile Sub-Terrestrial (Buffy the Vampire Slayer)
HSTHigh Score Table
HSTHealthy School Team
HSTHigh Pressure Sodium-Tubular
HSTHypertropy Specific Training (bodybuilding method)
HSTHazardous Substance Tax
HSTHubbard-Stratonovich Transformation
HSTHoyt's Sector Theory
HSTHybrid Silica Technologies, Inc. (Ithaca, NY)
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References in periodicals archive
In many aspects, President Trump's attitude followed the hegemonic stability theory, a body of theory that maintains that the establishment of hegemony for global dominance by a single great power is a necessary condition for global order in commercial transactions and international military security.
Citing George Modelski's hegemonic stability theory that there is an approximate one-hundred-year life cycle for global hegemons, Liu names the champions: Portugal in the sixteenth century, Holland in the seventeenth century, Britain in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, and America in the twentieth century.
Though I would argue that bringing in hegemonic stability theory or associational balance-of-power (instead of the material one Kang refers to) would have helped the explanation even more; but this would have been at the expense of accepting established theory.
American hegemony declared by advocates of hegemonic stability theory as indispensable for stable and prosperous world doesn't hold water anymore.
Hegemony in International Relations theory has two variants: on the one hand is the hegemonic stability theory, while the other variant uses Gramscian notions.
The interconnectedness between the two events will be explored in the light of the theoretical framework provided by the hegemonic stability theory. In this respect, the impact of the August war and the credit crunch on the perceived ability of the US to provide international public goods, allowing the current "unipolar" international system to work, will be briefly described.
Ruggie expands the definition to mean "an institutional form [including norms, regimes, and formal multilateral organizations] that coordinates relations among three or more states on the basis of generalized principles of conduct." He links multilateralism to hegemonic stability theory and underlines the importance of judging the nature of the leadership provided by the hegemon.
The model is also used to discuss a variety of interesting historical cases (including an entire chapter applying the model to the Seven Weeks War), as well as some enduring theoretical issues in international politics, such as hegemonic stability theory and the "democratic peace." In the limited space of this review, all the applications cannot be addressed; readers can judge for themselves whether or not they seem plausible.
The "Hegemonic Stability Theory" first coined by Charles Kindleberger in the 1970s focuses on the role of leading states- for example, Great Britain in the 19th century- and how changes in the distribution of power affect the world economy.
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