Abstract
The paper offers a new approach to conceptualizing a variety of Russian foreign policy schools. The author explains the distinction between academic theories and political doctrines and argues that in Russia the borderline between the two is often fuzzy. Then he categorizes foreign policy discourses as political (with realism and conservative normativism as the two most telling examples) and post-political / de–politicized. Each of these discourses is presented from the structure – agency perspective.
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More From: Debatte: Journal of Contemporary Central and Eastern Europe
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