Artigo Revisado por pares

Taboos and regional security regimes

2003; Taylor & Francis; Volume: 26; Issue: 3 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1080/01402390412331303035

ISSN

1743-937X

Autores

Janice Gross Stein,

Tópico(s)

International Relations and Foreign Policy

Resumo

A security regime is an uneasy compromise where the relationship among the parties is generally undefined, limited in scope, and transitional. The relationship is undefined, because the parties are usually former adversaries who, for the moment, do not think of war as a feasible or practical, or, under some conditions, even a possible instrument. Yet they are far from being allies. A security regime differs in important ways from an alliance or a security community. A security regime is also limited. What happens inside the regime is only a part of what happens in the larger relationship. Participation in a regime does not imply clear behavioral expectations outside the security arena. Finally, the parties to a security regime are usually in a transitional relationship; although the parties have moved away from a full-scale adversarial relationship, where they are going is less clear. Security regimes do not develop in a linear sequence to become ‘security communities’.

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