This article offers scholarly insight into contemporary international relations, which in recent years have been increasingly shaped by the intense rivalry between great powers, taking place below the threshold of open armed conflict.This article examines the enduring relevance of neorealism in explaining the dynamics of competition in the grey zone in the 21st century.Drawing on structural realism, the study argues that the fundamental characteristics of the international systemanarchy, the primacy of state actors, and the pursuit of security through relative powerremain central despite profound changes in the domains, instruments, and technologies of conflict.Particular attention is paid to the conceptualisation of the grey zone as an operational space between war and peace, where state actors employ hybrid, coercive, and ambiguous strategies to advance their interests while avoiding escalation.By comparing Cold War precedents with contemporary practices, the article demonstrates both continuity and transformation in great power behaviour.The findings suggest that grey-zone strategies strengthen neorealism's explanatory power and highlight its enduring analytical value for understanding strategic competition, hybrid threats, and the evolving global security environment.
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Vladimír Andrassy
Martin Ondruš
Boris Ďurkech
Insights into Regional Development
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Andrassy et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69c37b11b34aaaeb1a67d2bf — DOI: https://doi.org/10.70132/n3856348672