Abstract
The contemporary literature on middle powers is deeply divided between a liberal functionalist view of “Traditional” powers (e.g., Canada and Norway) as systemic stabilizers and a realist view of “Emerging” powers (e.g., Turkey and Brazil) as reformist actors. This paper empirically interrogates the “Power Paradox” hypothesis—the neorealist expectation that as a state’s material capabilities increase, its reliance on multilateral institutions will decrease—across these two distinct geopolitical clusters. Employing an explicitly exploratory quantitative framework, this study constructs a Material Power Index (MPI), aggregating global shares of GDP and military expenditure, and correlates it against a Multilateral Engagement Score (MES): a composite metric synthesizing UN voting alignment, peacekeeping burden-sharing, and development aid. Drawing on a purposive sample of 15 pivotal middle powers, the analysis yields patterns consistent with—though not confirmatory of—a structural divergence between clusters. The MPI-MES relationship in the Traditional (Global North) cluster exhibits a large negative correlation (r = −0.600, p = 0.208, n = 6) that, while short of conventional significance thresholds given the small sample, is directionally consistent with the Power Paradox hypothesis. The Emerging (Global South) cluster exhibits a near-zero correlation (r = +0.150), reflecting behavioral bifurcation between “Unilateralists” (Turkey, Russia) and “Functionalists” (India, Indonesia). These exploratory findings challenge Eurocentric assumptions in global governance scholarship and suggest that “Good International Citizenship” may function less as a fixed normative trait and more as a strategic adaptation to limited material capacity—a hypothesis that future large-N panel designs should formally test.
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