ID | 112875 |
Title Proper | Assessing cultural and regime-based explanations of Russia's foreign policy. 'authoritarian at heart and expansionist by habit'? |
Language | ENG |
Author | Tsygankov, Andrei P |
Publication | 2012. |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | Scholars disagree on how to interpret Russia's assertive foreign policy. According to some observers, Russia's authoritarian culture and political system have historically required the Kremlin to depend on the Western threat image at home and to engage in revisionist behaviour abroad. These observers recommend that Western nations abstain from engaging Russia as an equal contributor to shaping the global system. This article assesses the validity of the authoritarian expansionism theory by comparing it to other prominent perspectives on foreign policy, realism and constructivism. The article argues that, by perceiving Russia's historical and institutional distinctness as fundamentally threatening to the West, the theory overlooks important sources of foreign policy contestation at home and potentially varying directions abroad. The article selects the historically important cases of the Crimean War, the Cold War and the Russia-Georgia War to demonstrate the theory's flaws and to highlight the role of factors other than Russia's authoritarianism in the nation's foreign policy. |
`In' analytical Note | Europe-Asia Studies Vol. 64, No.4; Jun 2012: p.695-713 |
Journal Source | Europe-Asia Studies Vol. 64, No.4; Jun 2012: p.695-713 |
Key Words | Russia ; Foreign Policy ; Russia's Authoritarian Culture ; Political System ; Authoritarian Expansionism Theory ; Realism ; Constructivism |