This article examines the self-positioning of the three Baltic states in international politics in relation to the major structural pressures challenging the status quo of the transatlantic security configuration. The constitutive role of the Russia-Georgia war of 2008, the global economic recession, the debt crisis in the eurozone, and the shifting policy preferences and force projection of the United States towards Asia are explored as the key sources of the emerging Baltic security predicament. The empirical conclusions of the poststructuralist discourse analysis conducted for this study demonstrate how the Baltic states, in particular Estonia, have recently come to redefine the contents of ‘new’ Europe, thereby shifting the extant fault lines within the European Union.
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September 2013
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Research Article|
July 11 2013
Reinventing ‘new’ Europe: Baltic perspectives on transatlantic security reconfigurations
Maria Mälksoo,
Maria Mälksoo
*
a Institute of Government and Politics, University of Tartu, Lossi 36, 51003 Tartu, Estonia
* Corresponding author.
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Margarita Šešelgytė
Margarita Šešelgytė
b Institute of International Relations and Political Science, Vilnius University, Vokiečių str. 10, LT-01130, Vilnius, Lithuania
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* Corresponding author.
Communist and Post-Communist Studies (2013) 46 (3): 397–406.
Citation
Maria Mälksoo, Margarita Šešelgytė; Reinventing ‘new’ Europe: Baltic perspectives on transatlantic security reconfigurations. Communist and Post-Communist Studies 1 September 2013; 46 (3): 397–406. doi: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.postcomstud.2013.06.006
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