Journal of Eurasian Studies (Jan 2012)

Russian foreign policy in the realm of European security through the lens of neoclassical realism

  • Elena Kropatcheva

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.euras.2011.10.004
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3, no. 1
pp. 30 – 40

Abstract

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There are different views on (in-)predictability and on (non-)cooperation in Russian foreign policy towards the West, but also on the question about how - that is, through which theoretical framework - to interpret it. This essay aims at contributing to the debate around these three issues. Its goal is to demonstrate the expediency of using a neoclassical realist theoretical perspective, enhanced by the inclusion of such subjective factors as status/prestige and perceptions. While there are factors in Russian domestic and foreign policy which give it a certain degree of unpredictability, nevertheless, if it is studied in a comprehensive way, it turns out to be more consistent and predictable than it at first seems. Even though Russia is often accused of being anti-Western and non-cooperative, this argument does not hold true: Russian foreign policy is selective and includes both cooperative and non-cooperative tactics.

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