pp. 255-280
Lilliputian in Fluid Times: New Zealand Foreign Policy after the Cold War
Paul G. Buchanan looks at the evolution of New Zealand's foreign policy after the Cold War. He argues that New Zealand's ability to “punch above its weight” in contemporary international affairs was as much a product of fortuna as it was of policymaking virtu. It was only toward the end of the 1990s that a heterodox approach mixing realist, idealist, and constructivist ideas was confirmed as the basis for New Zealand's engagement with the world.
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