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Browsing by Subject "foreign policy"

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  • Willis, Grant (2024)
    Finnish national identity in defense policy is a concept that is often less emphasized in academic research. By utilizing the historical research method to evaluate 8 Finnish security policy documents from 2001-2022, this thesis seeks to uncover how the idea of national identity is used within the documents. There is an extensive historical background which covers wars and foreign relations of Finland to note the formation of a national identity and its variations over time. Constructivism as an approach to international relations and history in a narrative format is used as a theoretical background to investigate these issues. National identity is found to have some influence upon action taken in Finnish defence policy and can prescribe a range of options for maneuver.
  • Ricarova, Julie (2022)
    Faculty: Faculty of Arts Degree programme: Russian Studies (MARS) Author: Julie Ricarova Title: Friend or Foe? Russia as seen by Czech presidents Level: Master’s Month and year: May 2022 Number of pages: 63 Keywords: Russia; Czech Republic; presidents; bilateral relations; foreign policy; opportunities and threats; small state theory Supervisor or supervisors: Katalin Miklóssy Where deposited: Helsinki University Library Abstract: The aim of this thesis is to analyse the attitudes of presidents of the Czech Republic towards Russia and how they identify threats and opportunities of bilateral relations between the Czech Republic and Russian Federation. The study will do so with the use of small state theory as a tool for explaining how political elites approach the state identity and ideology, and consequently how they understand threats and opportunities in bilateral relations with Russia. Soon after the fall of communism during the autumn of 1989, the independent Czech Republic was established in 1993. As a former Soviet bloc satellite, the newly emerged small state of the Czech Republic sought to integrate into the western democratic structures such as NATO and the EU. January the 1st in 2023 will mark thirty years of independent Czech Republic existence. Equally divided in three decades by three different presidents who all served two executive terms, each of them understood the relations with Russia differently through the framework of their political and personal background and according to what kind of Russia they faced during their presidency. The thesis will analyse speeches and interviews of the presidents and identify their narratives about Russia. The result of this thesis is a close analysis of the Russia discourse of all three presidents. Since the presidents in the Czech Republic have a significant role in setting an agenda of foreign policy and in representing the state abroad, researching narratives of the presidents about Russia brings an important understanding to Czech-Russian relations. Furthermore, the process of establishing an approach of political elites towards Russia is highly relevant in the context of small European states. The Czech Republic serves as a good case study of how political elites from countries previously affiliated with the Soviet Union assess the bilateral relations with Russia.
  • Kangas, Mikko (2022)
    This thesis focuses on examining a popular concept in European Union’s foreign policy – Normative Power Europe. The thesis argues that we should adopt a different approach than is currently used to analyse Normative Power Europe. In here, the concept is seen as a foreign policy discourse, that has achieved a hegemonic position, and therefore dominated the conception of European Union’s role in international relations for the last decades. A special focus is turned on the relationship between European Union and African actors. The thesis examines Normative Power Europe discourse as a fundamental structure in European Union’s new Africa strategy, introduced in March 2020. The European Union has argued that the strategy builds on renewed partnership with Africa and aims to abolish the donor-recipient relationship between EU and Africa. The thesis draws on constructivist ontology in defining Normative Power Europe as a discourse. The writer argues that by choosing this type of approach, a researcher is able to critically examine the actorness and role of European Union. According to the constructivist ontology, the actorness of EU can be shaped and constructed. A discourse of Europe as normative power is a central element in the construction of European Union’s international role. The findings of this thesis show that European Union represents itself as a better option for Africa to form partnership with, instead of cooperation with such states as China and Russia. Norms and values of EU play an essential role when European Union persuades African actors to form partnership. The thesis argues that by constructing its global power and influence on normative superiority, the European Union risks creating a demand for itself and for its norms-based intervention without a legitimate justification for these actions. This is a problematic arrangement, and the thesis argues, that there is a demand for post-developmental theory in European Union’s foreign policy research.
  • Whyte, Breandán (2021)
    The past two decades has seen significant shifts (or a rebound) in Russian foreign policy, ranging from Putin’s pragmatic cooperation to a new line of assertiveness under a “rhetoric of resistance” against a perceived US-led Atlantic expansionism. The incommensurate views between Moscow and the Atlantic Community regarding the political layout of the post-Cold War order has seen the emergence of what some would describe as a New Cold War on the European continent. With it has come a renewed focus on Northern Europe and the Arctic. For smaller Nordic countries such as Norway, the collapse of the USSR brough a general optimism that Oslo’s geopolitical position between Moscow and Washington belonged to the past. However, the re-emergence of a Muscovite State capable and willing to assert its interests in opposition to Washington’s hegemonic interests has made it clear that these predictions had not come to pass. During the immediate post-Cold War period, Norwegian foreign and security policy underwent significant shifts in pursuit of its partnership interests vis-à-vis the United States. As such, Norway finds itself increasingly in a squeeze between its partnership interests and increased dependency vis-à-vis United States, and its position as a good neighbour towards Russia. As such, this thesis aims to understand on what grounds Russian perspectives may increasingly come to view Norway as a growing operational piece for US-led ‘post-Cold War expansive Cold War liberal order’?
  • Koskinen, Julia K. (2019)
    During the Cold War, the Arctic became a stage for the superpowers’ rivalry. The more ballistical armament was developed further, the more the Arctic armament increased. In the 1980s, the Arctic region was a region where the Cold War’s escalation was a real fear. Simultaneously the environmental questions started to concern more and more. Furthermore, although international agreements to protect nature had been negotiated and bilateral ones were being accelerated, there was no organisation for the Arctic dealing region as a whole. This lack of cooperation encountered with détente, the US and the Soviet Union’s leaders converged with rhetoric about restrictions on armaments. When Gorbachev gave a speech on October 1987 in Murmansk and longed for further cooperation in the Arctic region, a situation arose, which enabled the opening of cooperation negotiations. Eventually, Finland was the first to seize the moment, and this led to Finland’s initiative. The initiative aimed to arrange a Conference on the Protection of the Environment in Finland. This master’s thesis examines Finland’s Arctic diplomacy from September 1986 to October 1989, from The Reykjavík Summit to when the first meeting of Arctic issues with eight Arctic states was kept. More precisely, this thesis research how Finland was performing Arctic diplomacy during the period and if there were a change to Finland’s line after the Gorbachev’s speech. Hence, the thesis examines what type of reactions and consequences Gorbachev’s Murmansk speech affected in Finland’s foreign policy. Moreover, this thesis is interested in who was conducting nascent cooperation in the Arctic Region. The primary data used in this thesis are Finland’s Foreign Minister’s archives documents. The study shows that Finland’s Arctic diplomacy was at first in 1986, observative and reactional. However, after Gorbachev’s speech in Murmansk, Finland took the lead and worked actively to start cooperation. In this role, Finland needed to act as a balancer between the Arctic countries’ boundary conditions. Especially the US was hesitating and by this stretched Finland’s negotiator skills. Eventually, Finland achieved in arranging a consultative meeting in Finland in September 1989. This meeting became to be the first of two preparative meetings before the actual ministerial conference. Notably, Finland gained the leading force and was mainly conducting cooperation during the years examined. Nevertheless, the Gorbachev’s speech had a high impact on the momentum, but, significantly, Finland was the one who succeeded seize the moment.