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ID160061
Title ProperWhat Can Russia Teach Us about Change? Status-Seeking as a Catalyst for Transformation in International Politics
LanguageENG
AuthorKrickovic, Andrej ;  Weber, Yuval ;  Andrej Krickovic Yuval Weber
Summary / Abstract (Note)Although a general task of social science is to measure and predict change, international relations (IR) paradigms and theories have been unable to keep up with the rapid pace and destabilizing effects of change in international politics. When addressing Russia, IR's “change problem” becomes clearer: the world's largest country is treated as an object struggling to adjust to changes rather than a protagonist introducing them into the system. Yet, twice within the last quarter century, Russia has acted as a catalyst for changes in international politics that few saw coming and which confounded IR paradigms. The Soviet leadership's decision to withdraw from the Cold War standoff and dismantle its empire in Eastern Europe was one of the most surprising events of the twentieth century. Russia's interventions in Ukraine, Syria, and the 2016 US presidential elections have similarly caught most observers by surprise. IR theories have struggled to account for these actions and have not been able to integrate Soviet/Russian behavior into their larger understanding of change in international politics.
`In' analytical NoteInternational Studies Review Vol. 20, No.2; Jun 2018: p.292–300
Journal SourceInternational Studies Review Vol: 20 No 2
Key WordsRussia ;  Transformation in International Politics


 
 
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