
The study of grand strategy has historically been confined to a few great powers-preponderantly, the United States, China, and Russia. In contrast, this volume introduces readers to the novel field of "comparative grand strategy." Its co-editors offer a framework that expands the analysis beyond a traditional rationalist approach to incorporate significant cultural factors that influence strategists as they prioritize threats and opportunities in the global system. This framework then combines these factors with domestic political influences often understated or overlooked in the international relations literature. It considers both how grand strategy is actually formulated and the varied instruments used to implement it. Applying this framework, the volume's remaining contributors then examine how grand strategy is conceived, formulated, and implemented by ten states. These consist of the United Nations G5 members and five other states "pivotal" to global or regional economic development and security. This group is composed of Brazil and India-two regional powers operating in very different security environments-and Iran, Israel, and Saudi Arabia, who confront each other in a truly existential conflict. Departing from a state-based analysis, an eleventh case study examines the European Union-an organization that lacks many of the trappings of a conventional state but which is able to call upon more resources than most. The volume's concluding chapter points to both the theoretical and empirical areas of convergence and divergence highlighted by these chapters, and the prospective questions for future analysis in the emergent field of comparative grand strategy.
This volume investigates how grand strategy can be analyzed through a comparative framework that moves beyond traditional rationalist models to include cultural and domestic political variables. The editors, Thierry Balzacq and colleagues, argue that existing scholarship is overly focused on a small subset of great powers. They propose a multi-dimensional methodology that accounts for how states prioritize threats and opportunities, integrating both the formulation process and the practical implementation of strategic instruments.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts identify this work as a significant contribution to the expansion of international relations theory beyond traditional great-power paradigms. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, which serves as a rigorous resource for scholars and students of security studies.
Page Count:
367
Publication Date:
1900-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0191876747
ISBN-13:
9780191876745
No comments yet. Be the first to share your thoughts!