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Superpower - Current factors | A Wisdom Archive on Superpower - Current factors |  | Superpower - Current factors A selection of articles related to Superpower - Current factors |  |
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More material related to Superpower can be found here:
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Superpower, Superpower - Criteria, Superpower - Current factors, Superpower - Major Powers, Superpower - Origins, Superpower - Possible factors, Superpower - Potential superpowers, Superpower - Power distribution after the Cold War, Superpower - Second superpower, Superpower - The Cold War era, Superpower - The Soviet Union, Superpower - The United States, Superpower - The United States as the remaining superpower, BRIC, Global Power, Hyperpower, Power (international)
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ARTICLES RELATED TO Superpower - Current factors |  |  |  | Superpower - Current factors: Encyclopedia II - Superpower - Power distribution after the Cold WarThe post-Cold War world is considered an unipolar world, as the United States is the world's sole remaining superpower, with the largest economic and military capabilities.
Some analysts think the hegemonic stability theory explains the current evolution in international relations. Hegemonic states tend to overstretch their power. At the same moment new rivals will become gradually more powerful, eventually replacing or counterbalancing the weakened hegemony. This scenario could be happening at the moment, as high military spending co ...
See also:Superpower, Superpower - Origins, Superpower - Criteria, Superpower - Current factors, Superpower - Possible factors, Superpower - The Cold War era, Superpower - The Soviet Union, Superpower - The United States, Superpower - Power distribution after the Cold War, Superpower - The United States as the remaining superpower, Superpower - Potential superpowers, Superpower - Major Powers, Superpower - Second superpower Read more here: » Superpower: Encyclopedia II - Superpower - Power distribution after the Cold War |
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 |  |  | Superpower - Current factors: Encyclopedia II - Superpower - The Cold War eraThe term 'superpower' was originally coined to describe the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics and the United States of America.
Superpower - The Soviet Union.
The Soviet Union represented the ideology of Communism and led the Warsaw Pact, known as the Eastern Bloc in the West. The Soviet Union was a political, military, and economic superpower.
Superpower - The United States.
The United States represented the ideology of capitalism and led NATO during the Cold War. It was militarily, politically, and economical ...
See also:Superpower, Superpower - Origins, Superpower - Criteria, Superpower - Current factors, Superpower - Possible factors, Superpower - The Cold War era, Superpower - The Soviet Union, Superpower - The United States, Superpower - Power distribution after the Cold War, Superpower - The United States as the remaining superpower, Superpower - Potential superpowers, Superpower - Major Powers, Superpower - Second superpower Read more here: » Superpower: Encyclopedia II - Superpower - The Cold War era |
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 |  |  | Superpower - Current factors: Encyclopedia II - Superpower - CriteriaThe criteria of a superpower are not clearly defined and as a consequence they may differ between sources. The following criteria should therefore be interpreted as a non-exhaustive list of power factors that are generally associated with superpowers.
Superpower - Current factors.
Strong cultural influence, having soft power. Cultural influence incorporates developed p ...
See also:Superpower, Superpower - Origins, Superpower - Criteria, Superpower - Current factors, Superpower - Possible factors, Superpower - The Cold War era, Superpower - The Soviet Union, Superpower - The United States, Superpower - Power distribution after the Cold War, Superpower - The United States as the remaining superpower, Superpower - Potential superpowers, Superpower - Major Powers, Superpower - Second superpower Read more here: » Superpower: Encyclopedia II - Superpower - Criteria |
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 |  |  | Superpower - Current factors: Encyclopedia II - Superpower - OriginsThe term "superpower" was first used in this context in 1930, according to the Oxford English Dictionary, but did not pick up as a primarily descriptive term for the USA and USSR until the immediate post-war years (in the 1920s the term was used to describe electrification).
The term in its current political meaning is relatively new and was coined for the first time in the book The Superpowers, written by W. T. R. Fox, an American foreign policy professor at the Columbia University in 1943. Fox used this word to identify a new ...
See also:Superpower, Superpower - Origins, Superpower - Criteria, Superpower - Current factors, Superpower - Possible factors, Superpower - The Cold War era, Superpower - The Soviet Union, Superpower - The United States, Superpower - Power distribution after the Cold War, Superpower - The United States as the remaining superpower, Superpower - Potential superpowers, Superpower - Major Powers, Superpower - Second superpower Read more here: » Superpower: Encyclopedia II - Superpower - Origins |
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