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Articles

The “Finlandisation” of Finland: The Ideal Type, the Historical Model, and the Lessons Learnt

ABSTRACT

“Finlandisation” has become a buzzword and suggested solution to the on-going Ukrainian crisis. However, in Finland, Finlandisation tends to be a pejorative term because of its negative effects on Finnish domestic politics. Negative effects notwithstanding, Finland’s Cold War experience often appears as a success: it preserved its democratic system, prospered economically, and strengthened its international status. This analysis examines the historical evidence of what role Finlandisation—understood as a policy of collaboration and friendship with the greatest potential security threat to a country’s sovereignty and as a political culture related to that policy—played during the Cold War era. Did the strategy of accommodation go too far and was it superfluous to Finland’s survival and success? In this context, the article also discusses the “dangers” of Finlandisation and the gradual end of the policy.

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Notes on contributors

Tuomas Forsberg

Tuomas Forsberg is professor of International Politics at the University of Tampere and deputy director of the Centre of Excellence on Choices of Russian Modernisation at the Aleksanteri Institute of the University of Helsinki. Previously, he worked at the University of Helsinki, the George C. Marshall European Center for Security Studies, Garmisch-Partenkirchen, Germany, and the Finnish Institute of International Affairs. His research has dealt primarily with European security issues, focusing on the EU, Germany, Russia, and Northern Europe. His publications include with Graeme Herd, Divided West: European Security and the Transatlantic Relationship (2006) and articles in journals such as International Affairs, Journal of Peace Research, International Studies Review, Security Dialogue, and Journal of Common Market Studies.

Matti Pesu

Matti Pesu is a PhD candidate at the University of Tampere, Finland. He focuses on Finnish foreign policy, foreign policy analysis, and the end of the Cold War.
 

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