SYMMETRY AND RECIPROCITY IN SOUTH-AFRICA FOREIGN-POLICY

Citation
K. Vanwyk et S. Radloff, SYMMETRY AND RECIPROCITY IN SOUTH-AFRICA FOREIGN-POLICY, The Journal of conflict resolution, 37(2), 1993, pp. 382-396
Citations number
34
Categorie Soggetti
Social, Sciences, Interdisciplinary","Political Science","International Relations
ISSN journal
00220027
Volume
37
Issue
2
Year of publication
1993
Pages
382 - 396
Database
ISI
SICI code
0022-0027(1993)37:2<382:SARISF>2.0.ZU;2-Z
Abstract
This is a replication of Richardson, Kegley, and Agnew's cross-nationa l study focusing on symmetry and reciprocity as characteristics of dya dic foreign policy behavior. Our study applied similar scaling (WEIS) and statistical techniques to analyze the dyadic relations of a single country, South Africa. Both studies produced much in common, that is, the degree of quantitative symmetry in the most active dyads is rathe r evenly spread from high to low; and affective compatibility is very common with respect to the direction (cooperation or conflictive) of b ilateral foreign policy behavior. However, intensity of affect is very seldom reciprocal. The differences in the two studies were that symme try and reciprocity were more significantly related for the single-cou ntry dyads than those of the cross-national study; and nonreciprocal a ffective intensity characterizes cooperative relations more generally than it does conflictive relations in the cross-national study. For So uth African dyads this was not the case.