After Hegemony

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After Hegemony is a seminal work in international relations theory by Robert O. Keohane that explains how cooperation can persist among states in the international system without a dominant hegemonic power, emphasizing the role of institutions and regimes.

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After Hegemony canonical 1

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Predicate Object
instanceOf book
non-fiction book
work of international relations theory
academicDiscipline political science
analyzes the decline of U.S. hegemony
the persistence of cooperation after U.S. relative decline
argues cooperation can be sustained under conditions of anarchy
cooperation does not require a single dominant hegemon
institutions facilitate issue linkage
institutions provide information and monitoring
institutions reduce transaction costs in international cooperation
author Robert O. Keohane
contrastsWith realist theories of international relations
countryOfPublication United States of America
surface form: United States
critiques strong versions of hegemonic stability theory
emphasizes the role of international institutions
the role of international regimes
explains how cooperation can persist without a dominant hegemonic power
field international political economy
international relations
focusesOn cooperation in trade and monetary relations
post–World War II international economic order
hasForm monograph
hasImpactOn debates about cooperation under anarchy
debates between realists and neoliberals
hasSubtitle After Hegemony: Cooperation and Discord in the World Political Economy
surface form: Cooperation and Discord in the World Political Economy
influenced neoliberal institutionalism in international relations
the field of international political economy
the study of international regimes
isConsidered a classic text in international political economy
a seminal work in international relations
language English
mainTopic hegemonic stability theory
international cooperation
international institutions
international regimes
publicationYear 1984
publisher Princeton University Press
targetAudience scholars of international relations
students of international political economy
theoreticalApproach liberal
rationalist
usesConcept collective action problems
game theory
prisoner’s dilemma
regime theory
usesTheory neoliberal institutionalism

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