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Understanding the marginality constellations of small states: Serbia, Croatia, and the crisis of EU-Russia relations

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Authors
Kovačević, Marko
Article (Published version)
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Abstract
Understanding the contemporary identity-role construction of small states in South-East Europe is closely linked to the process of reshaping the relative geometry of regional influence of the EU-centre and its powerful marginal actors. This has become increasingly obvious since 2008 with the unraveling of the global economic crisis, Russia's revived influence in the region, and the crisis of EU enlargement - processes that are usually perceived as challenges to the prevalent European conception of order. This paper seeks to explore the interaction of more powerful actors from both the European center' and its 'margins' with the small states on the South-East margin, by developing the framework that builds on Noel Parker's theory of 'positive marginality' and the updated 'constellation theory' by Hans Mouritzen and Anders Wivel. Theoretically, I propose the concepts of 'marginality constellation', 'thin' and 'thick' margins, to understand how small states frame their understanding of ag...ency in world politics more broadly. Empirically, the paper delves into Croatia's and Serbia's foreign policies from 2014 on, to illustrate how the two countries manage their foreign policy identity narratives to respond to the shifting geopolitical centre-margin discourses of the EU and Russia in light of the crisis in Ukraine.

Keywords:
International relations / foreign policy roles / identity / small states / constellation theory / geopolitics
Source:
Journal of Contemporary European Studies, 2019, 27, 4, 409-423
Publisher:
  • Routledge Taylor & Francis Group
Funding / projects:
  • Serbia’s political identity in the regional and global context (RS-179076)

DOI: 10.1080/14782804.2019.1580564

ISSN: 1478-2804

WoS: 000498066000003

Scopus: 2-s2.0-85074627341
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4
2
URI
http://rfpn.fpn.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/761
Collections
  • Radovi istraživača / Researchers' papers
Institution/Community
FPN
TY  - JOUR
AU  - Kovačević, Marko
PY  - 2019
UR  - http://rfpn.fpn.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/761
AB  - Understanding the contemporary identity-role construction of small states in South-East Europe is closely linked to the process of reshaping the relative geometry of regional influence of the EU-centre and its powerful marginal actors. This has become increasingly obvious since 2008 with the unraveling of the global economic crisis, Russia's revived influence in the region, and the crisis of EU enlargement - processes that are usually perceived as challenges to the prevalent European conception of order. This paper seeks to explore the interaction of more powerful actors from both the European center' and its 'margins' with the small states on the South-East margin, by developing the framework that builds on Noel Parker's theory of 'positive marginality' and the updated 'constellation theory' by Hans Mouritzen and Anders Wivel. Theoretically, I propose the concepts of 'marginality constellation', 'thin' and 'thick' margins, to understand how small states frame their understanding of agency in world politics more broadly. Empirically, the paper delves into Croatia's and Serbia's foreign policies from 2014 on, to illustrate how the two countries manage their foreign policy identity narratives to respond to the shifting geopolitical centre-margin discourses of the EU and Russia in light of the crisis in Ukraine.
PB  - Routledge Taylor & Francis Group
T2  - Journal of Contemporary European Studies
T1  - Understanding the marginality constellations of small states: Serbia, Croatia, and the crisis of EU-Russia relations
EP  - 423
IS  - 4
SP  - 409
VL  - 27
DO  - 10.1080/14782804.2019.1580564
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Kovačević, Marko",
year = "2019",
abstract = "Understanding the contemporary identity-role construction of small states in South-East Europe is closely linked to the process of reshaping the relative geometry of regional influence of the EU-centre and its powerful marginal actors. This has become increasingly obvious since 2008 with the unraveling of the global economic crisis, Russia's revived influence in the region, and the crisis of EU enlargement - processes that are usually perceived as challenges to the prevalent European conception of order. This paper seeks to explore the interaction of more powerful actors from both the European center' and its 'margins' with the small states on the South-East margin, by developing the framework that builds on Noel Parker's theory of 'positive marginality' and the updated 'constellation theory' by Hans Mouritzen and Anders Wivel. Theoretically, I propose the concepts of 'marginality constellation', 'thin' and 'thick' margins, to understand how small states frame their understanding of agency in world politics more broadly. Empirically, the paper delves into Croatia's and Serbia's foreign policies from 2014 on, to illustrate how the two countries manage their foreign policy identity narratives to respond to the shifting geopolitical centre-margin discourses of the EU and Russia in light of the crisis in Ukraine.",
publisher = "Routledge Taylor & Francis Group",
journal = "Journal of Contemporary European Studies",
title = "Understanding the marginality constellations of small states: Serbia, Croatia, and the crisis of EU-Russia relations",
pages = "423-409",
number = "4",
volume = "27",
doi = "10.1080/14782804.2019.1580564"
}
Kovačević, M.. (2019). Understanding the marginality constellations of small states: Serbia, Croatia, and the crisis of EU-Russia relations. in Journal of Contemporary European Studies
Routledge Taylor & Francis Group., 27(4), 409-423.
https://doi.org/10.1080/14782804.2019.1580564
Kovačević M. Understanding the marginality constellations of small states: Serbia, Croatia, and the crisis of EU-Russia relations. in Journal of Contemporary European Studies. 2019;27(4):409-423.
doi:10.1080/14782804.2019.1580564 .
Kovačević, Marko, "Understanding the marginality constellations of small states: Serbia, Croatia, and the crisis of EU-Russia relations" in Journal of Contemporary European Studies, 27, no. 4 (2019):409-423,
https://doi.org/10.1080/14782804.2019.1580564 . .

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