THE RISING NATION – STATES AND THE POLITICAL STANCE OF THE HEGEMONY: A THEORETICAL REVIEW

This article was originally published as: THE RISING NATION – STATES AND THE POLITICAL STANCE OF THE HEGEMONY: A THEORETICAL REVIEW

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Abstract

After the USSR fell apart, the US exerted masterful economic pressure to stop the expansion of capitalism and reorganise the international system, opening it up to all countries. The emergence of China and other nearby governments, along with the quantifiable budgetary disadvantages of the US, marked a paradigm shift in the 21st century. The rapid rise of political and military might of diaspora states is the subject of this paper’s analysis. China has built its internal institutions with the likely intention of upending the US status quo, which is why other countries have followed suit by renaming and reshaping their internal systems. effectively achieving peaceful development with the tools of technology at hand.  Such as contemporary initiative, the application of soft and hard goods, and infrastructure tactics that could result in the pursuit of economic and military dominance and cause drastic changes in internal reformations. The study used the idealism theory and secondary data collection, which involves gathering information from books, newspapers, government bulletins, the interment, and other sources. The concepts of equilibrium, interdependence, consensus, diplomatic decision-making, trade links, and alliances among nations that have resulted in political and economic progress within the global arena were explained using the idealism framework. Additionally, the study looks at the hegemony attitude towards the developing world’s states, as many of them have emerged in the twenty-first century to compete with superpowers, including China, Japan, India, and others.

Authors

  • ETOR CHARITY (DENNIS OSADEBAY UNIVERSITY ASABA, DELTA STATE – NIGERIA)

Keywords

International, system, Capitalism, Structural, Rebranding

References

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