ABSTRACT

This work seeks to develop a new concept with which to analyse the actions and activities of states that tend to be relatively ignored by the discipline of International Relations (IR).

As a discipline, IR has a tendency to lean towards the analytically safe. Given the current and recent dynamism of the international system that is both surprising and undesirable. Arranged around the concept of the idea of the Cusp State (and cuspness more generally), the book consists of empirical analysis of eight different countries Brazil, Iran, Israel, Japan, Mexico, Taiwan, Turkey and Ukraine, defined as ‘states that lie uneasily on the political and/or normative edge of what is widely believed to be an established region’. By focusing on the importance of comparing groups of states, like states with high degrees of ‘cuspness’, this book argues that it is possible to categorise the world in a fresher and more original way, and one which covers more of the globe than either a systemic or regionalist approach would do.

This work will be of great interest to students and scholars of Geopolitics, International Security and Regionalism.

chapter |24 pages

Introduction

‘Cusp States’ in international relations 1 – in praise of anomalies against the ‘milieu’

chapter |17 pages

Geopolitical representation of Turkey’s cuspness

Discourse and practice

chapter |18 pages

From cusp to hub?

How Turkey tried to instrumentalize its cuspness as an aspiring multi-regional middle power

chapter |20 pages

Ukraine as a Cusp State

The politics of reform in the borderland between the EU and Russia

chapter |17 pages

Iran as a Cusp State

The politics of dislocation

chapter |14 pages

Israel’s foreign policy towards the PLO and its location on the cusp

From coherence to incoherence?

chapter |18 pages

Straddling the region and the world

Brazil’s dual foreign policy comes of age

chapter |23 pages

Between two regions

The scope and limits of Mexico’s Cuspness

chapter |16 pages

Regional governance and Japan as a Cusp State

Whither spatial boundaries in East Asia?

chapter |16 pages

Taiwan as a cusp case

Contrasting its people’s democratic beliefs with those of the Chinese and Americans