What is the story behind the paradoxical survival of small and weak states in a world of great powers and crude power politics? And what explains the dramatic rise and fall in the number of
states overtime, following no consistent trend and not showing an immediately obvious direction or pattern?
The answers lie at the system-level: Small states survival is shaped by the international states system. Small state survival and proliferation is determined first and foremost by features of
and dynamics created at the states system. As the states system changes and evolves the chances for small states to survive or proliferate change as well. In fact, a quantitive investigation
confirms this, showing that over the course of more than 3½ centuries, the number of small states did fluctuate widely and at times dramatically.
In sum, the small state security is shaped by exogenous, systemic factors, not by small states’ own foreign policies.