1st Edition

Security Policy Reorientation in Peripheral Europe A Comparative-Perspectivist Approach

By Kjell Engelbrekt Copyright 2002
    314 Pages
    by Routledge

    314 Pages
    by Routledge

    This title was first published in 2002. This rich comparative analysis looks at security policy reorientation in four European states located at the periphery of the European continent. During the post-Cold War period, Greece, Bulgaria, Sweden and Finland conducted a security policy that was heavily influenced by their close proximity to the iron curtain. Probing this transition during a decisive phase of the post-Cold War reconstitution of the wider European security order, the author analyzes national security policy making from the standpoints of three international relations traditions - realism, institutionalism and political anthropology. This engaging work is invaluable for students, scholars and policy analysts working in the field of international relations and European politics.

    Contents: The European security order and its periphery; Conceptualizations of security; The logic of anarchy; Socializing peripheral Europe; Circuli Virtuosi et vitiosi?; Concluding reflections; A European core? A non-perspectivist epilogue; Appendix; Bibliography.

    Biography

    Kjell Engelbrekt

    ’This is one of the most original and impressive contributions to IR theory in general and comparative security studies in particular to have come out of Northern Europe - or Europe as a whole, for that matter - for a long time. Painstakingly argued, and fully cognisant of the state of the art in security studies and IR theory, it will both stimulate, challenge and perhaps even exasperate all serious scholars of comparative European security and foreign policy, as well as those more generally involved in current theoretical and methodological debates within the field.’ Walter Carlsnaes, Uppsala University, Sweden ’In this thought-provoking and well-written book, the author commits an ’Allison’; i.e. he deals with one and the same topic - security policy reorientations in peripheral Europe - from three different perspectives, in case realism, institutionalism and political anthropology.’ Dr. Hans Mouritzen, Danish Institute of International Studies, Denmark ’Kjell Engelbrekt examines the rapid security policy changes of four smaller European countries near the East-West border after the end of the Cold War. He shows the impact of the classic realist factors of power and interest, the impact of the rapidly forming new European institutions, and some effects of distinctive national cultures or values. The book will be of great interest to those concerned with (especially European) security policy. But it will also be of interest to those, beyond the international relations community in political science, interested in theories about internal and external impacts on national states and their policies. Beyond his own findings, Engelbrekt’s discussions of these theories are most informative.’ John W. Meyer, Professor of Sociology, Stanford University, California, USA '...a little gem that marries empirical investigation with useful intellectual insights...a well-crafted book that repays careful reading and has value at a number of l