Reviving the Russian empire: the Crimean intervention through a neoclassical realist lens

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Series Details Vol.25, No.1, March 2016, p112-133
Publication Date March 2016
ISSN 0966-2839
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Abstract:

Although many policy-makers and scholars maintain that international norms have altered the motivations underlying state behaviour, this article argues that states continue to pursue national self-interest, but in ways that remain understudied. While traditional realist assumptions explain a great deal of state behaviour, they have not been widely used to account for important alternative tools of state intervention, such as economic and normative strategies. Focusing on the case of Russia's 2014 intervention in Ukraine, this article offers insights into how, and under what circumstances, these tools are used to accomplish traditional state objectives. Guided by the tenets of neoclassical realism, the article argues that in the case of Russia, military force is no longer the sole, or even the primary, means used to accomplish traditional security goals. Such dynamics have significant theoretical and policy implications for contemporary international relations.

Source Link http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09662839.2015.1084290
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