Tying down the Gullivers: tripartite strategic balancing in unipolar international systems

<p>This dissertation seeks to conceptualise and operationalise the concept of soft balancing in international relations by articulating a “theory of tripartite strategic balancing” which is applicable to both international and regional unipolar systems. It has a twofold purpose: one theoretic...

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Main Author: Volsky, A
Other Authors: Khong, Y
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2014
Subjects:
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author Volsky, A
author2 Khong, Y
author_facet Khong, Y
Volsky, A
author_sort Volsky, A
collection OXFORD
description <p>This dissertation seeks to conceptualise and operationalise the concept of soft balancing in international relations by articulating a “theory of tripartite strategic balancing” which is applicable to both international and regional unipolar systems. It has a twofold purpose: one theoretical and the other empirical. First, it seeks to develop a theory of tripartite strategic balancing which encompasses three forms of strategic balancing: internal, external, and soft balancing. The second part seeks to test the theory’s utility in explaining international political outcomes in the post-Cold War international system. In particular, it seeks to ascertain whether and how “second-tier great powers” have strategically balanced against the United States on a global level since the end of the Cold War. The analyses will focus largely on the foreign policies of Russia and France – the chief soft balancers.</p> <p>However, this dissertation also seeks to extend the concept of soft balancing into the regional level of analysis by examining whether and how minor-regional powers soft balance against regional unipolar leaders. For instance, it will examine whether and how the Russian Federation has been soft balanced against by states in the “European Near Abroad.” The analyses will focus primarily on the foreign policies of Poland – the chief soft balancer in the region. The dissertation will employ three in-depth case studies – the Kosovo Crisis (1999), the Iraqi wars (1991-2003), and the Georgia Crisis (2008) – to verify whether or not tripartite strategic balancing is actually occurring as the theory predicts. It will heavily rely on sources and interviews conducted during my time working at the United Nations Security Council and the Polish Ministry of Foreign Affairs. These findings seek to contribute a more nuanced strand of thinking to the realist paradigm in international relations, and they offer practical implications for both US and Russian foreign policymaking.</p>
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spelling oxford-uuid:143e926b-3101-4131-b17a-16fa67b514712024-12-01T14:18:33ZTying down the Gullivers: tripartite strategic balancing in unipolar international systemsThesishttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_db06uuid:143e926b-3101-4131-b17a-16fa67b51471International studiesWar (politics)Public international lawLawPolitical scienceEnglishOxford University Research Archive - Valet2014Volsky, AKhong, Y<p>This dissertation seeks to conceptualise and operationalise the concept of soft balancing in international relations by articulating a “theory of tripartite strategic balancing” which is applicable to both international and regional unipolar systems. It has a twofold purpose: one theoretical and the other empirical. First, it seeks to develop a theory of tripartite strategic balancing which encompasses three forms of strategic balancing: internal, external, and soft balancing. The second part seeks to test the theory’s utility in explaining international political outcomes in the post-Cold War international system. In particular, it seeks to ascertain whether and how “second-tier great powers” have strategically balanced against the United States on a global level since the end of the Cold War. The analyses will focus largely on the foreign policies of Russia and France – the chief soft balancers.</p> <p>However, this dissertation also seeks to extend the concept of soft balancing into the regional level of analysis by examining whether and how minor-regional powers soft balance against regional unipolar leaders. For instance, it will examine whether and how the Russian Federation has been soft balanced against by states in the “European Near Abroad.” The analyses will focus primarily on the foreign policies of Poland – the chief soft balancer in the region. The dissertation will employ three in-depth case studies – the Kosovo Crisis (1999), the Iraqi wars (1991-2003), and the Georgia Crisis (2008) – to verify whether or not tripartite strategic balancing is actually occurring as the theory predicts. It will heavily rely on sources and interviews conducted during my time working at the United Nations Security Council and the Polish Ministry of Foreign Affairs. These findings seek to contribute a more nuanced strand of thinking to the realist paradigm in international relations, and they offer practical implications for both US and Russian foreign policymaking.</p>
spellingShingle International studies
War (politics)
Public international law
Law
Political science
Volsky, A
Tying down the Gullivers: tripartite strategic balancing in unipolar international systems
title Tying down the Gullivers: tripartite strategic balancing in unipolar international systems
title_full Tying down the Gullivers: tripartite strategic balancing in unipolar international systems
title_fullStr Tying down the Gullivers: tripartite strategic balancing in unipolar international systems
title_full_unstemmed Tying down the Gullivers: tripartite strategic balancing in unipolar international systems
title_short Tying down the Gullivers: tripartite strategic balancing in unipolar international systems
title_sort tying down the gullivers tripartite strategic balancing in unipolar international systems
topic International studies
War (politics)
Public international law
Law
Political science
work_keys_str_mv AT volskya tyingdownthegulliverstripartitestrategicbalancinginunipolarinternationalsystems