The Limits of Neorealism: Marginal States and International Relations Theory (World in Review)
Harvard International Review 2004, Spring, 26, 1
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Publisher Description
The foreign policy of small states tends to attract little public or scholarly attention. Much of the discussion about the international role of less powerful nations seems to acquire a mocking tone, flippantly dismissing Switzerland's quaint neutrality or famine-stricken Eritrea's place in the US coalition for the war in Iraq. Since the powerful naturally contribute more to the shaping of international circumstances, a discourse that eschews weaker countries in favor of more influential ones makes practical sense. Examining small states, however, amounts to more than musing over puzzling curiosities. It can inform the consideration of pressing practical issues by improving the means used to approach them. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
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