Periodic Reporting for period 1 - SINATRA (Subject or Object? SINo-American competition and European sTRAtegic autonomy)
Période du rapport: 2023-01-01 au 2025-06-30
By gathering a database of 700 national strategic documents, over 1000 WTO-related decisions, and leveraging existing data on UN general assembly voting, SINATRA has assembled the most extensive and comprehensive set of quantitative data to identify European alignment patterns in US-China competition. So far, research on this topic has been qualitative. No analysis had systematically arranged and compared a group of states or offered a consistent set of measurements for alignment. This limitation impedes replicability and generalizability, which this database aims to remedy.
Four ‘capstone’ articles contribute to setting out the theoretical foundations of the project. The first article (published, Review of International Studies) examines how great powers cope with states or actors who “hedge” or elude taking sides in great power competition. The second article (published, Journal of European Public Policy) examines the balance between cooperation and conflict in Franco-German relations. The third article (R&R, Contemporary Security Policy) looks at the various levels of analysis in wedge strategies (inter-state, sub-state, transnational). The fourth article (under review, European Journal of International Relations) examines how “secondary” states and actors draw on different types of binding strategies to balance autonomy and security. Several additional articles advance the project’s objectives.
The project challenges conventional wisdom associating secondary states either with “balancing” and “security seeking” or “hedging” and “autonomy seeking”. SINATRA posits that secondary states constantly seek to reconcile security and autonomy, and theorize how they do that. Through vertical and horizontal binding, respectively, balancing secondary states try to impose their reading of the security environment on their great power patron, and move from a dynamic of dependence to one of mutual dependence; whereas by investing in partnerships with other secondary states and institutions they also sought to minimize their dependence on their great power patron. In this manner, SINATRA adds a contribution to the alliance literature.