Asle Toje
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Introduction
Neoclassical realism in Europe
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Connecting neoclassical realism to the dormant European realist tradition and applying this to the foreign-policy questions on European minds can both add to the richness of the neoclassical realist tradition and help to reinvigorate realism as a European school of thought. Neoclassical realism has three parts to it: the independent variable (i.e., the actor's position in the international system), the intervening variable (i.e., the domestic-level 'transmission belt' through which structural pressures are filtered) and the dependent variable (i.e., the foreign policy outcome). Neorealist approaches see the structure of the international system as the driving force behind changes in European politics. The intervening domestic-level variables which 'channel, mediate, and (re)direct' structural pressures represent the main - and most controversial - innovation of neoclassical realism. It allows for the exploration of the 'internal processes' by which states 'arrive at policies and decide on actions' in response to external constraints and opportunities.

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