تعداد نشریات | 161 |
تعداد شمارهها | 6,532 |
تعداد مقالات | 70,500 |
تعداد مشاهده مقاله | 124,085,247 |
تعداد دریافت فایل اصل مقاله | 97,189,203 |
الگوی مدیریت اختلافهای قدرتهای بزرگ در قرن بیستویکم: از موازنۀ قوای مشارکتی تا موازنۀ قوای رقابتی | ||
مطالعات اوراسیای مرکزی | ||
مقاله 8، دوره 16، شماره 1، شهریور 1402، صفحه 173-196 اصل مقاله (617.9 K) | ||
نوع مقاله: مقاله پژوهشی | ||
شناسه دیجیتال (DOI): 10.22059/jcep.2023.355928.450133 | ||
نویسندگان | ||
مجید روحی دهبنه* 1؛ حمید رضا رهبری2 | ||
1استادیار گروه علوم سیاسی، دانشکده علوم انسانی، دانشگاه آزاد اسلامی، رشت، ایران | ||
2کارشناسی علوم سیاسی، دانشکده اقتصاد و علوم سیاسی، دانشگاه شهید بهشتی، تهران، ایران | ||
چکیده | ||
کنسرت قوا بهدلیل نقشی که در حفظ صلح و دوری از جنگ میان قدرتهای بزرگ اروپایی در قرن نوزدهم داشت، همواره بهعنوان روشی جذاب در حکمرانی جهانی مطرح بوده است. در قرن بیستویکم، بروز برخی از مشکلات و تنش میان قدرتهای بزرگ و بهویژه بحران و جنگ اوکراین در سالهای 2014 و 2022، تغییرهای ساختاری و هنجاری در نظام بینالملل، مشکلات محیط زیستی و مانند آن، موجب شد برخی پژوهشگران دوباره به این روش حکمرانی توجه کنند. در این نوشتار با روش پژوهش کیفی و با کمک نمونهپژوهی، با استفاده از منابع کتابخانهای و همچنین رویکرد نظری موازنۀ قوای رقابتی و مشارکتی هدلی بول و دیدگاه بنجامین میلر، بهدنبال پاسخ این پرسش هستیم که پس از بحران و جنگ اوکراین برای مدیریت تنش و اختلاف در میان قدرتهای بزرگ، میتوان امکانی برای تشکیل کنسرت قوا مانند قرن نوزدهم تصور کرد؟ در پاسخ این فرضیه مطرح میشود که دلایل ساختاری، هنجاری، ایدئولوژیک، شناختی، برداشتها و جهانبینیهای متعارض هرکدام از طرفها و بیتوجهی به حوزۀ نفوذ، امکان اندکی برای موازنۀ قوای مشارکتی(کنسرت قوا) گذاشته است. یافتههای پژوهش نشان میدهد که بعد از تهاجم روسیه به اوکراین در سال 2022، با بازگشت رقابتهای ژئوپلیتیکی و حاکمشدن فضای واقعگرایی، موازنۀ قوای رقابتی، الگوی کنونی حاکم در نظام بینالملل در میان قدرتهای بزرگ و بهویژه در میان روسیه، چین و آمریکا شده است. بر این اساس، امکان تشکیل کنسرت قوای مشارکتی مانند قرن نوزدهم، واقعبینانه بهنظر نمیرسد. | ||
کلیدواژهها | ||
کنسرت قوا؛ موازنۀقوا؛ نظام بینالملل؛ آمریکا؛ چین؛ روسیه | ||
عنوان مقاله [English] | ||
Models for Managing Tension among Great Powers in 21st Century: from Associational Balance to Adversarial Balance | ||
نویسندگان [English] | ||
Majid Rouhi Dehboneh1؛ Hamid Reza Rahbari2 | ||
1Assistane Professor, Department of Political Science, Islamic Azad University, Rasht, Iran | ||
2Bachelor in Political Science, Faculty of Economics and Political Science, Shaid Beheshti Unversity, Tehran, Iran | ||
چکیده [English] | ||
Intruduction: In the first half of the 21st century the international community has witnessed many changes. Following the changes in the structure of the international order and the distribution of power, the world is not a unipolar system led by the United States, unlike the post-Cold War era. In addition, there are growing tensions, some hidden and some overt, among the Great powers that are manifesting in the geopolitical and normative sphears. These topics, that range from changing power dynamics, the emergance of new state actors in the international community, environmental concerns, organized crime, immigrant issues, cyber warfare, the tensions over the South China Sea, Taiwan, the Ukraine Crisis, NATO expansion, among others, if it is not solved, it can be a danger for the future of the mankind. Therefore, the management of differences between great powers including Russia, China, the US, India, Japan, Germany, France, and England is recommended to avoid. To move towards this goal, the concert of powers in the 19th century has been the theme. This literature attempts to assess the probability of a true concert of powers in the 21st century as a way to manage competition between the United States, China and Russia, especially after the Ukraine Crisis in 2014 and 2022. Research Question: The main question is that, after the Ukraine crisis, to manage the tension and differences between great powers, can we imagine the possibility of forming a concert of powers like in the 19th century? Research Hypothesis: Inspired by the works of the thinkers of the Islamic Republic and using the balance of hostile power and management found in the works Headley Bull and Benjamin Miller, it can be suggested that the current differences in the structural, normative, ideological and cognitive views of the United States, China and Russia toward global governance make the formation of a concert of powers simply impossible. Methodology and Theoretical Framework: This paper has a qualitative approach and uses sample research as one of the common approaches in the Islamic Republic of Iran. To dig deeper, the history of concert of powers was examined to ensure the possibility of an emerging concert or lack thereof, was closer to today's reality. In addition, to achieve a model of how China, Russia and the United States commit to or hinder the formation of a concert of powers, the elements that make a concert of powers possible were analyzed. The concert of powers is a collective security system or a security regime that was formed based on the cooperation between the four great powers of the 19th century, Great Britain, Prussia, Austria, and Russia. Headley Bull, in the Anarchic Society, wrote that in the 19th century, there was an international society and international relations as an order in which the managerial responsibilities of the Great powers constituted the system. Despite the element of cooperation, a certain type of balance of power determines how international relations work. It is called the associational balance of power. It became the enemy's balance of power due to constant pressure to increase power. In addition to Bull’s view, Miller added that internal issues, ideological and cognitive factors may be equally important in concert formation. This literature is in theoritically based on the views of the two thinkers mentioned above. Results and Discussion: This research has indicated that the international relations have had 3 separate cases of power coordination. From 1815 to World War I, from 1975 Helsinki accords to 1989 and from the Paris Charter in 1990 to 2014 which marked Russia's initial invasion of Ukraine. The data show that in each of these periods, great powers had to manage, resolve or otherwise cooperate with their differences on a regional or global scale. Moreover, the views of the Americans, Chinese and Russians towards the formation of a concert of powers may not be the same. The Russian may be the only ones to insist on a concert of powers, while the Chinese were not positive about it until 2008. During the cold war, the United States engaged in concerted behavior, for lack of a better term, although it has deviated from it ever since the end of the cold war. This conclusion is based on the policies that the United States has adopted to contain Russia and China and the lack of recognition that the Americans have for the areas of influence something that Russians keep pointing out. Russians are not only pessimistic about the intentions of the United States, but also see these differences as the return of strategic and geopolitical competition. Therefore, the reality of international system after the war in Ukraine shows that the balance of hostile forces is the current approach governing international relations. Conclusion: After decades, the level of cooperation between the three Great powers identified in this article as pillars of the potential concert of powers has declined. Efforts to cooperate have sometimes failed because China and Russia refuse to cooperate with the West and the United States. This has led the international community to the most chaotic state of recent times where the liberal order is pitted against any order favored by the Chinese and the Russians. In addition, the concept of Sovereignty has changed and the West, allied with the United States has taken measures to contain China and Russia. It can no longer consider a concert of powers which Great powers participate in the management of world affairs. If we want to accept the idea of forming a coordinated collective security system, in the 21st century, developing states, great powers, as well as emerging countries should legitimately and appropriately regulate their actions with such an order. | ||
کلیدواژهها [English] | ||
Concert of Powers, Balance of Power, International System, U.S, Russia, China | ||
مراجع | ||
Baunov, Alexander (2015), “The Concert of Vienna: Russia's New Strategy”, Available at: https://carnegiemoscow.org/commentary/61892 (Accessed on: 12/8/2023). Bull, Hedley (1977), The Anarchical Society: A Study of Order in World Politics, New York, 1977. Burke-White, William (2021), A Strategic Roadmap for Reentry 2021 and Beyond: U.S. Institutional Commitment in A New Geo-Strategic Environment, https://www.brookings.edu/wpcontent/uploads/2021/02/fp_20210218_engagement_report_v3.pdf (Accessed on: 5/2/2021). Chollet, Derek, Eric Edelman, Michele Flournoy, Stephan J Hadly, Martin Indyk, Bruce Jones, Robert Kagan, Kristen Silverberg and Jake Sullivan (2017), “Building "Situations of Strength": A National Security Strategy for the United States”, The Brookings Institute, Available at: brooking.edu/wp-contenty/uploads/2017/02/fp_201702_ofc_report_web.pdf (Accessed on: 02/2017). Dehshiri, Mohammadreza and Moselm Golestan (2016), “The Great Powers Pattern of Behavior in International Crisis Management in the Uni-multipolar System”, Iranian Political Science Association, Vol. 11, No. 3, pp. 79-124, Available at: www.ipsajournal.ir/issue_56_59.html?lang=en(Accessed on: 8/9/2016) [in Persian]. Elrod, Richard B (1976), “The Concert of Europe: A Fresh Look at International System”, World Politics, Vol. 28, No. 2, pp.159-174, (doi.10.2307/2009888). Engstrom, Maria (2014), “Contemporary Russia Messianism and New Russian Foreign Policy”, Contemporary Security Policy, Vol. 35, Vol. 3, pp. 356-379, (doi:10.1080/13523260.2014.965888). Fateminejad, Seyed Ahmad and Rohollah Eslami (2022), “China, India and Regional Order in Central Asia: A Test for Grat Power Management?” Central Eurasia Studies, Vol. 15, No.1, (doi:10.22059/JCEP.2022.345680.450083), [in Persian]. Götz, Elias and Camill Renand Merlen (2018), “Russia and the Question of World Order”, European Politics and Society, Vol. 20, No. 2, pp. 133-153, (doi.10.1080/23745118.2018.1545181). Hedayati Shahidani, Mehdi and Roman Vladimirovich Pinkovtsev (2015), “Russian-American Behaviroal Patterns in Regional Conflicrs Management; Case Study Syrian Crisis”, Political Strategic Studies, Vol. 4, No. 12, pp. 61-85, Available at: https://qpss.atu.ac.ir/issue_368_294.html?lang=fa (Accessed on:9/6/2015), [in Persian]. Jervice, Robert (1985), “From Balance to Power: A Study of International Security Cooperation”, World Politics, Vol. 38, No. 1, pp. 58-79, (doi.10.2307/2010351). Haass, Richard and Charles A. Kupchan (2021), “The New Concert of Power, How to Prevent Catstrophe and Promote Stability in a Multipolar World”, Available at: www.foreignaffairs.com/articles/world/2021-03-23/new-concert-powers (Accessed on: 23/03/2021). Kagan, Korina (2007), “The Myth of the European Concert: The Realist-Instituionalist Debate and Great Power Behavior in the Eastrn Questions, 1821-41”, Security Studies, Vol. 7, No. 2, pp. 1-57, (doi: 10.1080/ 09636419708429341). Kobayashi, Kazushige (2017), “Whose Global Governance? Explaining the Evolution of Russia's Approach to Global Governance, 1945-206”, Rising Power Quarterly, Vol. 2, No. 1, pp. 183-209, Available at: https://risingpowersproject.com/files/wp-content/uploads/2017/02/vol2.1-kazushige-kobayashi.pdf(Accessed on: 02/2017). Kupchan, Charles A. and Clifford A. Kupchan (1991), “Concerts, Collective Security and the Future of Europe”, International Security, Vol. 16, No. 1, pp. 114-161, (doi: 10.2307/2539053). Lamont, Christopher K (2017), Research Methods in International Relations, Translated by Alireza Taib, Tehran: Chapakhsh Publications [in Persian]. Lascurettes, Kyle (2017), “The Concert of Europe and Great-Power Governance to Today, What Can the Order of 19th-Century Europe Teach Policymakers About International Order in the 21st Century?” https://www.rand.org/content/dam/ rand/pubs/perspectives/PE200/PE226/RAND_PE226.pdf (doi.10.7249/PE226). Lavrov, Sergei (2006), “The Rise of Asia, and the Eastern Vector of Russias Foreign Policy”, Russia in Global Affairs, https://eng.globalaffairs.ru/articles/the-rise-of-asia-and-the-eastern-vector-of-russias-foreign-policy/ (Accessed on: 12/07/2006). Lind, Michael (2006), The United States in the Global Concert of Powers, Available at: https://www.theglobalist.com/the-united-states-in-the-global-concert-of-powers/ (Accessed on: 10/4/2006). Little, Richard (2014), A Compositeview of the Balance of Power for the Twenty-First Century, in: Little, The Balance of Power in International Relations: Metaphors, Myths, and Models, Cambridge University Press. Mankoof, Jeffrey (2009), Russian Foreign Policy, Return of Great Power Politics, Chapter One, United Kingdoms: Rowman and Littlefield Publishers. Matheson, Neil (1982), The Rules of the Game of Super Power Intervention in the Third World, Lanham: University Press of America. Mazzar, Michael and Hal Brands (2017), “Navigating Great Power Rivalry in the 21st Centry”, Available at: https://warontherocks.com/2017/04/navigating-great-power-rivalry-in-the-21st-century (Accessed on: 4/5/2017). Mazarr, Michael J. Timothy Heath R. and Astrid Stuth Cevallos, (2018), China and the International Order, Rands Corporation Publication, Santa Monica, Calif, Available at: https://www.rand.org/pubs/research_reports/RR2423.htm (doi: 10.7249/RR2423). Mead, Walter Russell (2014), “The Return of Geopolitics, The Revenge of the Revisionist Power”, Foreign Affairs, Vol. 93, No. 3, pp. 69-79, (Accessed on: 12/8/2023). Miller, Benjamin (1994), “Explaining the Emergence of Great Power Concerts”, Review of International Studies, Vol. 20, No. 4, pp. 327-348, (doi: 10.1017/s026021/10500118157). Nikonov, Vyacheslav (2018), “Back to the Concert”, Russia in Global Affairs, https://eng.globalaffairs.ru/articles/back-to-the-concert-2 (Accessed on: 19/03/ 2018). Noori, Alireza (2021), “The Nature of Russian and Chinese Revisionism: Irans Policy and Intersts”, Central Eurasian Studies, Vol. 14, No. 2, Autumn & Winter, pp. 371-396, (doi: 10.22059/JCEP.2021.328326.450023) [in Persian]. Peace Research Institute Frankfurt (2014), A Twenty-First Crntury Concert of Power-Promoting Great Power multilateralism for the Post-Transatlantic Era, Peace Research Institute Frankfurt Publication, Available at: , https://www.hsfk.de/fileadmin/HSFK/hsfk_downloads/PolicyPaper_ATwentyFirstCenturyConcertofPowers.pdf (Accessed on: 12/8/2023). Person, Robert (2020), “Four Myths about Russian Grand Strategy”, Available at: http: //www.csis.org/ blogs /post- soviet- post / foar – myths- myths – about – Russian – grand – strategy (Accessed on: 9/22/2020). Rosecrance, Richard and Peter Scott (1997), “Concerts and Regional Intervention”, In: David A. Lake and Patrick Morgan, Eds, Regional Orders, Building Security in a New World, University Park: the Pennsylvania State University Press. Rouhi Dehboneh, Majid (2021), “Theoretical and Practical Explanation of Russia's Attitude about International Order during Putin Period”, International Relations Research Quarterly, Vol. 21, No. 2, pp. 127-158, (doi: 10.22034/IRR.2021.280294.1950) [in Persian]. Raymond, Gregory A. (1997), “Problem and Prospects in the Study of International Norms”, Mershon International Studies Review, Vol. 41, No. 2, pp: 205-245, (doi.org/10.2307/222668). Rynning, Sten (2015), “The False Promise of Continental Concert: Russia, the West and the Necessary Balance of Power”, International Affairs, Vol. 91, No. 3, pp. 539-552, (doi:10.1111/1468-2346.12285). Sarotte, Mary Elise (2014), 1986: the Struggle to Great Post-Cold War Europe, Princton: Princton University Press. Saunders, Paul (2020), “US Embrace of Great Power Competition Also Means Contending with Spheres of Influence”, Available at: Russiamatters.org/ analysis/us-embrace-great-power- competition- also- means- contending- with- spheres- of- influence (Accessed on: 2/13/2020). Schulz, Matthias (2011), The Concert of Europe: How Did It Work, What Did It Accomplish, What Were Its Shortcomings, What Can We Learn, In the Post-Transatlantic Age: A Twenty-First Century Concert of Powers? Peace Research Institute Frankfurt Publication, Available at: https://www.hsfk.de/ fileadmin/HSFK/hsfk_downloads/PolicyPaper_ATwentyFirstCenturyConcertofPowers.pdf (Accessed on: 12/31/2016). Shokoohi, Saeed (2023), “Putins Misperseptions and the Russians Invansion of Ukraine 2022”, Central Eurasia Studies, Vol. 15, No. 2, Autumn & Winter, pp. 265-288, (doi:10.22059/JCEP.2023.349531.450103)[in Persian]. Slantchev, Branislav L. (2005), “Territory and Commitment: The Concert of Europe as Self-Enforcing Equilibrium”, Security Studies, Vol. 14. No. 4, pp. 565-606, (doi:10.1080/09636410500468792). Soutou, George-Henry (2000), “Was There a European Order in the Twentieth Century? From the Concert of Europe to the End of the Cold War”, Contemporary European History, Vol. 9, No. 3, pp. 329-353, (doi: 10.1017/S0960777300003027). Summery of 2018 National Defence Strategy of the United States of America (2018), Avialable at: https://dod.defense.gov/Portals/1/Documents/pubs/2018-National-Defense-Strategy-Summary.pdf (Accessed on: 12/8/2023). Weizhun, Mao (2014), “Muddle or March: China and the 21st Sentury Concert of Power”, www.scielo.br/j/rbpi/a/PKSLZKS, pp. 243-269, (doi.10.1590/0034-7329201400215). White, Hugh (2008), “Why War in Asia Remains Thinkable”, Survival: Global Politics and Strategy, Vol. 50, No. 6, pp. 85-104, (doi: 10.1080/00396330802601875). Wright, Thomas (2015), “The Rise and Fall of the Unipolar Concert”, The Washington Quarterly, Vol. 37, No. 4, pp. 7-24, (doi:10.1080/0163660x.2014.1002150). | ||
آمار تعداد مشاهده مقاله: 317 تعداد دریافت فایل اصل مقاله: 317 |