Abstract

This article is about how change at the international system level has produced those political outcomes rcIatcd to sccurity and defence desil:,rnin the ı990s Europe. il is both a description and evaluation of the way the European security arcna has changcd as wcll as an attcmpt to comc to terms with the process that kd ta 'internalisation' of system change. By using the term 'internalisation' we mcan the process, or better, the causal reJationship betwccn system change and policy response. Our argument is that the nature of the post-Cold War systemic reality has bccn instrumental in sustaining and even inereasing actars' faith in co-opcrative frameworks and in further collcctive behaviour and interaction in European sccurity and defence.

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