Small States in World Politics: Norwegian Interests and Foreign Policy Challenges in the Arctic

Q1 Social Sciences
Beate Steinveg
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Abstract

Small states are perceived to be subject to the will of great powers in the international system. Yet, small states – such as Norway – also have interests they pursue through various means. This article features an inventory of the Norwegian government’s main foreign policy and Arctic policy interests, and examines the rationale behind these interests from a domestic and an international perspective. The article highlights Norway’s challenges in the Arctic, including balancing between Russia and NATO, Norway’s bilateral relationship with the United States, dealing with China as an emerging Arctic stakeholder, and Norway’s ambivalent relationship with the European Union concerning the Arctic. The analysis draws on theorizing about small states in world politics and Putnam’s two-level game. The latter facilitates the examination of how the Norwegian government must reconcile domestic and international priorities simultaneously, and how the negotiation of foreign policy is conducted as a balancing act in national and international arenas.
世界政治中的小国:挪威在北极地区的利益和外交政策挑战
在国际体系中,小国被视为受制于大国意志。然而,小国(如挪威)也有自己通过各种手段追求的利益。本文盘点了挪威政府在外交政策和北极政策方面的主要利益,并从国内和国际角度探讨了这些利益背后的理由。文章强调了挪威在北极地区面临的挑战,包括在俄罗斯和北约之间的平衡、挪威与美国的双边关系、与作为北极地区新兴利益相关者的中国的关系,以及挪威与欧盟在北极地区的矛盾关系。分析借鉴了世界政治中的小国理论和普特南的两级博弈理论。后者有助于研究挪威政府如何同时兼顾国内和国际优先事项,以及外交政策谈判是如何在国内和国际舞台上进行平衡的。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Arctic Review on Law and Politics
Arctic Review on Law and Politics Social Sciences-Law
CiteScore
2.70
自引率
0.00%
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0
审稿时长
24 weeks
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