Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-7cvxr Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-29T07:32:07.843Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Counter-Core Role of Middle Powers in Processes of External Political Integration

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 July 2011

Jean Barrea
Affiliation:
Belgian “Fonds National de la Recherche Scientifique”, is now Associate Lecturer in International Relations at the University of Louvain, Belgium.
Get access

Extract

Theorists in the field of political integration have already established that first-rank states usually assume leadership of the process of what I term external political integration. (The concept itself is neutral: Several autonomous political units merge into a larger one, which may take the form of a loosely-knit confederation, a full federation, or a unitary state.) To use Karl Deutsch's terminology, die leading states usually operate as “core areas.” This phenomenon shows that a first-rank state usually regards its relationship with the process of integration as arising out of the theoretical demands of its prestige.

Type
Research Notes
Copyright
Copyright © Trustees of Princeton University 1973

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1 I propose the term external political integration because it is conceptually more neutral than the terms used throughout literature. The term international integration presupposes that the political units undergoing integration are nation-states; the term political unification implies that the superstate will assume a unitary character; and the term regional political unification is not as neutral as external political integration. Only the latter refers equally to local, regional, continental, or even universal processes of political integration.

2 For the purpose of this article there is no need for a more detailed definition. Readers interested in more exhaustive definitions should refer, for example, to Deutsch, Karl W. and others, Political Community and the North Atlantic Area (Princeton 1957), 57Google Scholar; Etzioni, Amitai, Political Unification (New York 1965), 4Google Scholar; Haas, Ernst B., The Uniting of Europe (London 1958), 16Google Scholar; Lindberg, Leon N., The Political Dynamics of European Economic Integration (Stanford 1963), 6Google Scholar; and to Lindberg, and Scheingold, S. A., Europe's Would-Be Polity (Englewood Cliffs, N.J. 1970), 32.Google Scholar

3 This is not the opinion of Galtung, who maintains that “aggression is most likely to arise in social positions in rank-disequilibrium.” Galtung, Johan, “A Structural Theory of Aggression,” Journal of Peace Research, No. 2 (1964), 98.Google Scholar

4 Etzioni, (fn. 2) 46Google Scholar; see especially his footnote 59.

5 Waite, P.B., The Life and Times of the Confederation, 1864–1867 (Toronto 1962), 6, 193–94Google Scholar; Reid, Stewart J. H., McNaught, Kenneth, and Crowe, Harry S., A Source Book of Canadian History (Toronto 1959), 229Google Scholar; Morton, William L., The Critical Years. The Union of British North America (Toronto 1964), 44.Google Scholar

6 The Cambridge History of the British Empire. VI, Canada and Newfoundland (Cambridge 1930), 439.

7 Mclnnis, Edgar, Canada, a Political and Social History (Toronto 1954), 306.Google Scholar

8 See Wallace, W. Stewart, The Dictionary of Canadian Biography (Toronto 1945).Google Scholar

9 Wise, B. R., The Commonwealth of Australia (London 1909), 236Google Scholar; Wise, , The Making of the Australian Commonwealth, 1889–1900 (London 1913), 240.Google Scholar

10 SirQuick, John and SirGarran, Robert R., The Annotated Constitution of the Australian Commonwealth (Melbourne and London 1901), 9799, 145–46, 225Google Scholar; Hall, H. L., Victoria's Part in the Australian Federation Movement, 1849–1900 (London 1931), 140, 151.Google Scholar

11 See Serle, Percival, Dictionary of Australian Biography (Sydney 1949).Google Scholar

12 The Cambridge History of the British Empire, VII (1), Australia (Cambridge 1933), 432–34, 440; Hall, (fn. 10), 151.Google Scholar

13 Thompson, Leonard M., The Unification of South Africa, 1902–1910 (Oxford 1960), 486.Google Scholar

14 Hancock, William K., Smuts, I. The Sanguine Years, 1970–1919 (New York 1962), 236.Google Scholar

15 Thompson, (fn. 13), 315, 348, 396.Google Scholar

16 Denis, Ernest, La fondation de l'empire allemand, 1852–1871 (Paris 1906), 4748Google Scholar; Pflanze, Otto, Bismarck and the Development of Germany (Princeton 1963), 36.Google Scholar

17 Pflanze, (fn. 16), 495–96Google Scholar; Denis, (fn. 16), 395, 482.Google Scholar

18 Gaxotte, Pierre, Histoire de l'Allemagne (Paris 1963), II, 246.Google Scholar