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Introducing public choice in international relations: the Russian invasion of Ukraine

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Version 3 2024-06-11, 14:59
Version 2 2024-03-25, 16:47
Version 1 2024-03-01, 12:44
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-11, 14:59 authored by Aris TrantidisAris Trantidis

With this article, I present a public choice perspective on Russia’s war on Ukraine. I criticise the realist view according to which Russia’s security concerns, defined by President Putin, prompted the conflict. I argue that realism offers a deficient analytic framework to the extent that it disregards the political and economic structure of Russia and, generally speaking, how the political economy of each case study shapes preferences, strategies and intra-elite relations, which feed into foreign policy formation. Russia is a government-controlled economy and society; a key property of Russia’s political economy is the dependency of key socio-economic actors and groups on the regime’s survival. This landscape pre-empts the expression of genuine feedback and dissent from society, and explains why Putin’s decision has faced very little disagreement and resistance. Given the previously close economic ties between Russia and Ukraine, this article also challenges capitalist peace theory for its blanket assertion that dense economic relations would provide a strong disincentive for countries to resort to war. Instead of talking about capitalism generically, we can discern varieties of capitalism, as they condition state–society relations differently. In Russia, the value that key socio-economic elites assign to their relationship with Putin outweighs the costs they are experiencing from the conflict and the external sanctions. Developing a public choice perspective in the study of international relations focuses on the preferences and strategies of the leadership and of domestic elite-level actors within the aggressor state, and invites attention to the power asymmetries that characterise their relationship.

History

School affiliated with

  • School of Social and Political Sciences (Research Outputs)

Publication Title

Journal of Public Finance and Public Choice

Volume

39

Issue

1

Pages/Article Number

75-90

Publisher

Bristol University Press

ISSN

2515-6918

eISSN

2515-6926

Date Submitted

2023-08-14

Date Accepted

2023-07-01

Date of First Publication

2023-07-31

Date of Final Publication

2024-04-01

Open Access Status

  • Open Access

Date Document First Uploaded

2023-08-11

ePrints ID

55735

Publisher statement

© AESP 2024