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Middle Powers and the Rise of China: 'Identity Norms' of Dependency and Activism and the Outlook for Japan-South Korea Relations vis-a-vis the Great Powers

Authors
Son, Key-Young
Issue Date
3월-2014
Publisher
CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
Citation
JAPANESE JOURNAL OF POLITICAL SCIENCE, v.15, no.1, pp.91 - 112
Indexed
SSCI
SCOPUS
Journal Title
JAPANESE JOURNAL OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
Volume
15
Number
1
Start Page
91
End Page
112
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/99070
DOI
10.1017/S1468109913000364
ISSN
1468-1099
Abstract
How do state identities and their accompanying norms affect security behaviour especially when states consider forming alliances or alignments? Are middle powers different from great powers in their security norms and preferences? This article identifies dependency and activism as two 'identity norms' that constitute and reproduce medium-sized states as bona fide middle powers. This article argues that, due to the identity norms of a middle power, Japan and South Korea are reluctant to form a bilateral alliance between themselves and their efforts to socialize with China do not necessarily contradict their security relationships with the United States. The first section focuses on the norm of dependency to illustrate whether Japan and South Korea sought to strengthen bilateral alignment in the event of major security crises, provoked by China and North Korea. It argues that a middle power is not disposed to strengthen alignment with another middle power in the event of a national security crisis because of its entrenched norm of dependency on a great power. The second section elaborates the norm of middle power activism. Both Japan and South Korea have engaged in diplomatic efforts to enmesh China in a number of multilateral security mechanisms in order to hedge against the relative decline of US influences in East Asia.
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