Bremmer's J Curve describes the relationship between a country's openness and its stability; focusing on the notion that while many countries are stable because they are open (the United States, France, Japan), others are stable because they are closed (North Korea, Cuba, Iraq under Saddam Hussein).
United Nations | Commonwealth of Nations | League of Nations | United Nations Industrial Development Organization | United Nations Conference on Trade and Development | United Nations General Assembly | Fall Out Boy | United Nations University | The Fall (band) | The Fall | Southern Nations, Nationalities, and People's Region | Rise Records | United Nations Security Council | Six Nations Championship | United Nations Economic Commission for Europe | light curve | United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees | United States Ambassador to the United Nations | United Nations Security Council resolution | United Nations Charter | Rise Against | Righteous Among the Nations | The Fall of the House of Usher | United Nations Interim Administration Mission in Kosovo | United Nations Security Council Resolution 1267 | United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change | Six Nations | Secretary-General of the United Nations | Model United Nations | United Nations Security Council Resolution 1373 |
This theory was suggested initially by the author Ian Bremmer, in his book The J Curve: A New Way to Understand Why Nations Rise and Fall.
General Secretary Hu's focus on stability and openness is the central model addressed in the book The J Curve: A New Way to Understand Why Nations Rise and Fall by Ian Bremmer.