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Mednarodno razvojno sodelovanje kot sredstvo pametne moči v zunanji politiki malih držav donatoric : magistrsko delo
ID Tišler, Natalija (Author), ID Arbeiter, Jana (Mentor) More about this mentor... This link opens in a new window

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Abstract
Mednarodno razvojno sodelovanje (MRS) je rezultat zgodovinskih neravnotežij v razvoju držav in tudi danes odraža razmerje moči v mednarodni skupnosti. Čeprav so po drugi svetovni vojni države donatorice prepoznale moralno obveznost pomagati manj razvitim delom sveta in sodelovati pri povojni obnovi, so s tem istočasno uresničevale tudi svoje gospodarske interese ter krepile vpliv v državah prejemnicah. Tudi v današnjem ustroju MRS gre le redko za altruizem, saj države donatorice uradno razvojno pomoč (ODA) namenjajo premišljeno in s ciljem uresničevanja lastnih gospodarskih, političnih in drugih interesov. MRS je s tem postalo institucionalizirano sredstvo moči v zunanji politiki, pri čemer je od zmogljivosti države donatorice in njenih strateških usmeritev odvisno, ali bo MRS uporabila kot sredstvo trde, mehke ali kombinacije obeh – pametne moči. Magistrsko delo ugotavlja, da tudi male države kljub svojim materialnim omejitvam MRS lahko uporabljajo kot sredstvo pametne moči. S tem nadgradi njihovo dosedanje razumevanje v znanstveni literaturi. Na raziskovalno vprašanje »Kakšne so značilnosti MRS kot sredstva pametne moči v zunanji politiki malih držav donatoric?« skuša odgovoriti prek oblikovanja lastnega modela analize. Za aplikacijo na model izbere primer Republike Slovenije, ki je kljub visokemu zavedanju normativnih zavez na tem področju med relativno najmanjšimi donatoricami znotraj OECD DAC. S tem potrdi uporabo MRS kot sredstva pametne moči v njeni zunanji politiki. To spoznanje koncept MRS aktualizira in predstavlja osnovo za nadaljnje raziskovanje interesov ter operacionalizacije MRS s strani (malih) držav donatoric ODA.

Language:Slovenian
Keywords:mednarodno razvojno sodelovanje, uradna razvojna pomoč, pametna moč, male države, Republika Slovenija
Work type:Master's thesis/paper
Typology:2.09 - Master's Thesis
Organization:FDV - Faculty of Social Sciences
Place of publishing:Ljubljana
Publisher:N. Tišler
Year:2025
Number of pages:1 spletni vir (1 datoteka PDF (89 str.))
PID:20.500.12556/RUL-170246 This link opens in a new window
UDC:339.96(043.2)
COBISS.SI-ID:244156163 This link opens in a new window
Publication date in RUL:02.07.2025
Views:316
Downloads:90
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Secondary language

Language:English
Title:International development cooperation as a smart power instrument in foreign policy of small donor states
Abstract:
International development cooperation (IDC) is the result of historical imbalances in the development of countries and continues to reflect the balance of power in the international community. Although after the Second World War donor states recognized a moral obligation to participate in post-war reconstruction, simultaneously they were pursuing their own economic interests and strengthening their influence in the recipient countries. Even in today's IDC structure, altruism is rarely an element, as donor states allocate official development assistance (ODA) primarily with the aim of implementing their economic, political and other objectives. The IDC has thus become an institutionalized instrument of power in foreign policy, with the material capacity of the donor state and its strategic orientations determining whether it's used as an instrument of hard or soft power or a combination of both – smart power. Master's thesis extents the existing scientific understanding and argues that even small states, despite their material constraints, can use it as an instrument of smart power, and identifies the characteristics of such practice through designing own analysis model. As an example of small state, it chooses the case of the Republic of Slovenia, which strongly recognizes normative imperatives, but falls among the smallest donor states within the OECD DAC. Despite, its application to the model confirms its use of IDC as an instrument of smart power. This insight brings the concept of IDC up to date and provides a basis for further exploration of the interests and operationalization of IDC by (small) ODA donor states.

Keywords:international development cooperation, official development assistance, smart power, small states, Republic of Slovenia

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