This book provides a comprehensive analysis of Scandinavia as a
regional international society, including the Nordic Peace and the
rise of the Scandinavian welfare state.
Schouenborg aims to take the next big step in the theoretical
development of the English School of International Relations -
particularly the structural version introduced by Barry Buzan. He
analyses the formation of a Scandinavian regional international
society over a 200-year period and develops the concepts of primary
institutions and binding forces as an analytical framework. In
doing so, he not only offers one of the first systematic
applications of English School structural theory, but also sheds a
new comparative light on the distinctiveness of Scandinavian
international relations, and provides a novel intervention in the
debates about the emergence of the so-called Nordic Peace. In the
first part of the book Schouenborg explains the core concepts and
discusses how one may distinguish a regional international society
from the broader global international society in which it is
embedded. In the second part he provides an in-depth study of the
Scandinavian case, focussing on the periods 1815 to 1919; 1919 to
1989; and 1989 to 2010.
The Scandinavian International Society will be of interest to
students and scholars of international relations theory,
Scandinavian international relations and history, and researchers
engaged in comparative welfare state studies.
General
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