In this Book

Rising Powers and Foreign Policy Revisionism: Understanding BRICS Identity and Behavior Through Time

Book
Cameron G. Thies and Mark David Nieman
2017
summary
In Rising Powers and Foreign Policy Revisionism, Cameron Thies and Mark Nieman examine the identity and behavior of the BRICS (Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa) over time in light of academic and policymaker concerns that rising powers may become more aggressive and conflict-prone. The authors develop a theoretical framework that encapsulates pressures for revisionism through the mechanism of competition and pressures for accommodation and assimilation through the mechanism of socialization.  The identity and behavior of the BRICS should be a product of the push and pull of these two forces as mediated by their domestic foreign policy processes.

State identity is investigated qualitatively through the use of role theory and the identification of national role conceptions. Both economic and militarized conflict behavior are examined using Bayesian change-point modeling, which identifies structural breaks in time series data, revealing potential wholesale revision of foreign policy. Using this innovative approach to show that the behavior of rising powers is governed not simply by the structural dynamics of power but also by the roles that these rising powers define for themselves, they assert that this process will likely lead to a much more evolutionary approach to foreign policy and will not necessarily generate international conflict.
 

Table of Contents

Cover

Title Page, Copyright Page

pp. i-vi

Contents

pp. vii-viii

Preface

pp. ix-x

1. Introduction: The “Problem” of Emerging Powers

pp. 1-18

2. Explaining Change in the International System: A Role-Theoretic Approach to Emerging Powers

pp. 19-38

3. A Mixed-Methods Approach to Observing Identity and Behavior

pp. 39-60

4. Brazil: A Regional Leader in Need of Followers

pp. 61-80

5. Russia: A Once and Future Great Power?

pp. 81-98

6. India: From Nonalignment to Nuclear Power

pp. 99-116

7. China: Responsible Stakeholder or Revisionist Great Power?

pp. 117-134

8. South Africa: Punching above Its Weight as a Middle Power

pp. 135-158

9. Conclusion: Toward a Better Understanding of Emerging Powers

pp. 159-174

Notes

pp. 175-182

References

pp. 183-204

Index

pp. 205-206
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