Neutrality beyond the Cold War

Publisher: Cambridge University Press

E-ISSN: 1469-9044|19|3|289-304

ISSN: 0260-2105

Source: Review of International Studies, Vol.19, Iss.3, 1993-07, pp. : 289-304

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Abstract

Radical changes in the international arena in recent years have shattered many of the time-worn accounts of political order on the European continent. As the axis along which international politics evolves continues to shift, not only are states and international institutions being re-ordered into a new hierarchy of power, authority and influence but the changes are also affecting the organization of international political space. In the process, many traditional features of the international political arena are becoming outdated. In particular, (in)security, a central concern of states since early modernity, is giving way to economic growth, integration, cooperation and interdependence. Whereas ‘bipolarity’ used to describe the structure of Europe ‘hegemony’ and ‘hierarchy’ are now more accurate terms for analyzing the distribution of power on the continent.