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ID134007
Title ProperHegemony, force posture, and the provision of public goods
Other Title Informationthe once and future role of outside powers in securing Persian Gulf Oil
LanguageENG
AuthorRovner, Joshua ;  Talmadge, Caitlin
Publication2014.
Summary / Abstract (Note)International relations theories emphasize the stabilizing role hegemons play in world politics. But little scholarship has examined the link connecting hegemony to its potentially positive returns in the security realm: force posture. We correct this deficit by developing and testing an argument about the consequences of different hegemonic force postures under varying threat conditions. We present a typology of force posture options and probe their effects through over-time analysis of how major powers have worked to provide one particularly important public good since 1945: access to Persian Gulf oil. Drawing on field work, we also explore the implications of our framework for current and future US force posture in the region. We conclude that hegemonic stability is a very real phenomenon in the Gulf, but it does not require the massive forward deployment of US forces that has characterized the past twenty years of US presence there.
`In' analytical NoteSecurity Studies Vol.23, No.3; Jul-Sep.2014: p.548-581
Journal SourceSecurity Studies Vol.23, No.3; Jul-Sep.2014: p.548-581
Key WordsPersian Gulf ;  Perto-Economy ;  Economic Power ;  Energy Policy ;  Energy Security ;  Force Posture ;  Energy Politics ;  Topology ;  Hegemonic Stability ;  International Power ;  Security Realm ;  International Community - IC ;  International Relations - IR ;  Political Phenomenon