@article{article_1632763, title={CHANGING ENERGY SUPPLY SECURITY OF US AFTER THE ’COLD WAR’: AN EVALUATION WITHIN THE FRAMEWORK OF ’HEGEMONIC STABILITY THEORY’}, journal={Florya Chronicles of Political Economy}, volume={11}, pages={43–78}, year={2025}, author={Yalçın Çakmaklı, Yonca}, keywords={Küresel Ekonomi Politik, Hegemonik İstikrar Kuramı, Enerji Güvenliği, Küresel Sistemik Değişim}, abstract={Energy resources are one of the most important factors in shaping the policies of states today. When we look at the factors underlying the interstate power struggles experienced in the world from the discovery of the importance of oil with the invention of internal combustion engines in the late 19th century to the present day, it is seen that access to energy resources, especially oil and natural gas, which are unequally distributed on the world’s surface, has emerged as one of the most important reasons for these struggles. This research examines the energy security approach of the USA, which rose as a hegemonic state in the unipolar system that emerged after the end of the Cold War and then faced rivals such as China and Russia that challenged its hegemony, from a global economic-political perspective and tries to explain the power struggles experienced in the regions of the world rich in energy resources today within the framework of the Hegemonic Stability Theory, an economic-political theory that addresses hegemony and international systemic change.}, number={1}, publisher={İstanbul Aydın Üniversitesi}