8 research outputs found
Non-Western small states:activists or survivors?
In this introduction to the collection, we explain its focus on non-Western small states. While the terms ânon-Westernâ and âsmall statesâ are problematic â we discuss these problems here â the smallness and non-Westerness of the states studied by the contributing authors set them apart in a way that has attracted little academic attention so far. They allow them to operate with fewer normative and practical constraints than their bigger, Western counterparts; offer them a wide range of (often historically forged) political ties; and force them to draw on a diversity of approaches and strategic thinking, and a creativity, that they are too rarely credited for. Non-Western small states, rather than being mere survivors constrained to the worldâs periphery, are better understood as activist states intent on existing. The collection offers a range of analytical keys to make sense of these states and their role in the international scene
Going it alone? North Koreaâs adaptability as a small power in a changing world
This article uses small states scholarship to map North Koreaâs evolution from a post-colonial small state to a system-influencing state due to its nuclear weapons programme. The framework allows for contributions to: (1) The DPRK literature which in some parts has suggested the future collapse of the state, (2) The small states literature that suggests they can only survive if they integrate larger political and/or economic units, (3) The mainstream IR literature and its dominant realist streak that considers great powers and their will as the main drivers in contemporary world politics
Modern diplomacy / R.P. Barston.
Includes bibliographical references and index.xxi, 432 p.