Asle Toje
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Conclusion
The future of neoclassical realism in Europe
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Neoclassical realism employs as intervening variables both the incentives provided by the international system and the internal proclivities facing states, and through this generates more nuanced explanations of the making of foreign policy. The case studies illustrate that national interests - also when they are conducted in concert - arise to no small degree from exactly these kinds of particularism. Neoclassical realism represents an attempt to recapture the classic tradition of realism. Raymond Aron is put forth as the intellectual forefather of European neoclassical realism. Despite British inter-war idealism, the intellectual enterprise of international relations theory is little more than sixty years old. It is the product of a particular historical context - the 1950s - and part of a wider effort to come to terms with a new international system sown in the ashes of two world wars. In different places, theorizing took different forms.

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