ID | 187499 |
Title Proper | In defence of the Baltic Sea region |
Other Title Information | (non-)allied policy responses to the exogenous shock of the Ukraine crisis |
Language | ENG |
Author | Friede, Alexandra M |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | This article analyses changes in national defence policies across the Baltic Sea region after the exogenous shock of the Ukraine crisis in 2014. It draws on Punctuated Equilibrium Theory for theoretical guidance, particularly to understand the mechanisms leading to large-scale policy change after periods of relative stability. Since the outbreak of the Ukraine crisis, defence budgets in the Baltic Sea region have increased dramatically. Baltic Sea states invested in neglected capability development and redirected policy planning towards territorial and collective defence. By contrast, the Russian-Georgian conflict in 2008 had a negligible effect on the paradigm guiding defence planning processes, delayed and lukewarm policy responses let adaptation pressure grow. The empirical findings suggest that policy change reinforced post-2014 because a normative consensus emerged on why Europe's security order is at risk, a critical threshold of urgency was reached, setting off positive feedback cycles, and receptive policy venues, such as NATO, as well as capable external policy actors, such as the USA and the UK, put Baltic Sea security back on the agenda. |
`In' analytical Note | European Security Vol. 31, No.4; Dec 2022: p.517-539 |
Journal Source | European Security Vol: 31 No 4 |
Key Words | NATO ; Baltic Sea ; European Security ; Ukraine ; Defence Cooperation ; Policy Change ; Exogenous Shock ; Punctuated Equilibrium Theory |