domino theory
Học thuậtThân thiện
Definition
- Noun:
- A political theory: The domino theory is the idea that if one country in a region adopts a particular political system, especially communism, it will cause neighboring countries to adopt the same system in a chain reaction, like falling dominoes.
Usage Examples
- Noun:
- The domino theory was a major justification for U.S. involvement in the Vietnam War.
- Policymakers feared the domino theory, believing that the fall of one Southeast Asian nation to communism would lead to the fall of others.
Advanced Usage
- Historical Context: The term is most strongly associated with Cold War foreign policy, particularly concerning Southeast Asia in the 1950s-1970s.
- Analysts debated the validity of the domino theory throughout the Cold War.
Variants and Related Words
- Domino effect (n): A more general term for any situation where one event causes a series of similar events to follow.
- The bank's failure triggered a domino effect, leading to a wider financial crisis.
Synonyms
- Chain reaction theory: A phrase describing a similar sequential cause-and-effect process in politics.
- Containment theory: A related but distinct Cold War policy aimed at preventing the spread of communism, often informed by fears described by the domino theory.
Related Idioms
- "Like dominoes": A simile used to describe things that fall or fail in quick succession.
- One company declared bankruptcy, and then others fell like dominoes.
Noun
- the political theory that if one nation comes under communist control then neighboring nations will also come under communist control