2 Balance of Power, Power Balance, and Balancing

2020 ◽  
pp. 18-57
Balcanica ◽  
2006 ◽  
pp. 241-248
Author(s):  
Traian Sandu

Relations between Serbia and Romania throughout the war are viewed from the standpoint of the two countries' rivaling claims on the Banat and within the framework of power balance in the Allied camp with an emphasis on the position of the Romanian government and statesmen. Obviously, Romania's position was more favourable during the first two war years as the Allies sought to win her over for the Entente. Thus the Banat was included in compensations for her entering the war on the side of the Allies. Romania's defeat, however, produced a complete shift in the balance of power, with Romania now in an unenviable position, especially following the breach of the Salonica Front in September 1918. From the Romanian perspective, the Banat's destiny also depended on divergent political positions on the domestic scene. The fate of the Banat was eventually decided by the advancing Serbian army which took the whole territory, though under French command. The final decision became a responsibility of the Paris Peace Conference.


2021 ◽  
Vol 21 (3) ◽  
pp. 529-554
Author(s):  
Dalia Malik

Ethiopian–Egyptian relations have seen remarkable tension since Ethiopia began the Renaissance Dam construction in 2011, and tensions have since escalated when Ethiopia announced the filling stage. While Ethiopia defends its project due to its economic importance, Egypt fears its negative effects. The paper discusses the hydro-political differences between the Nile Basin countries, particularly Egypt and Ethiopia, regarding the issue of water sharing and the means of settling it. It also discusses the consequent diplomatic problems and changes in the balance of power in Africa with the rise of Ethiopia as a regional power. The paper has found that the worsening of the Nile Basin situation is a result of the persistence of the conflicting parties and their adherence to their positions with no willingness to make concessions. Given the lack of a comprehensive legal agreement to regulate the exploitation and sharing of Nile water, the only way to put an end to this conflict is through cooperation between all basin countries.


1974 ◽  
Vol 68 (4) ◽  
pp. 1569-1578 ◽  
Author(s):  
Walter Korpi

The widely accepted expectation achievement approach to conflict, which views conflict primarily as a response to relative deprivation, has recently been challenged by proponents of a political process approach, the central features of which are mobilization of power resources and the struggle for power. Here a power balance model of conflict is developed which incorporates the core concepts from both approaches. In this model the difference in power resources between the contending parties is used as the central independent variable. Relative deprivation, utility of reaching the goal and expectancy of success are introduced as intervening variables to relate the effects from changes in the balance of power between the parties to the probability of manifest conflict between them.According to the power balance model of conflict different types of relative deprivation (aspirational, decremental and progressive) will be differently correlated with the probability of conflict. The overall correlation between relative deprivation and conflict is expected to be insignificant. Situations where the difference in power resources between two parties is decreasing are seen as most conducive to conflict. When the power resources of an already weaker party are decreasing, the probability of conflict is assumed to be lower than when the weaker party is gaining power resources.


2021 ◽  
pp. 097639962199827
Author(s):  
Pavan Kumar

India–China relation is witnessing its worst phase after the 1962 War. Recent aggression by the Chinese forces in the Galwan valley and killing of at least 20 Indian soldiers have posed serious security concerns for India. This article studies nature of threat China poses to India’s security and the latter’s choices to respond to it. In doing so, this article explores the theories of the balance of power, balance of threat and of balancing behaviour associated with realism. It argues that China is a threat to India’s security in the South Asian region as well as to its larger economic and geopolitical interests in world politics. Current realities of world politics restrict India’s choices, and if it has to survive and find its rightful place and increase influence in world affairs, it has no choice but to balance Chinese behaviour and not the power. This is a shift from the Waltzian analysis, which focuses on the balance of power. This article argues that when states do not have adequate internal capabilities to balance a state, they need not necessarily align with the threat (bandwagon) or with another great power to counter the threat. In an interconnected world, they have the choice to balance the behaviour of states that pose a threat by performing soft balancing. India has the choice to balance Chinese behaviour by making a regional alliance in the Indo-Pacific region, and it will be in India’s interests to carry out soft balancing. This article problematizes the proposition suggested by Rajesh Rajagopalan, in India’s Strategic Choices: China and the Balance of Power in Asia, that, to balance China, India should align with the United States. This article concludes with the argument that alignment with the United States is a perilous affair, and it shall give rise to greater insecurities. The more favourable alternative for India is to balance Chinese behaviour through soft balancing via Indo-Pacific.


ELKHA ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (1) ◽  
pp. 9
Author(s):  
Vendi Ardianto Nugroho ◽  
Awang Noor Indra Wardana ◽  
Dwi Joko Suroso

Management of battery at direct current (DC) microgrids is the essential factor to maintain the balance of power and the bus voltage's stability in the grids. To ensure the quality of battery management is necessary to simulate the operation of the battery management system. This paper presents the simulations in various battery management algorithms.  The simulations were designed to determine the effect of these variations on the balance of the power balance, bus voltage stability, and battery consumption level. The configurations of one, two, and three battery groups could maintain a balance of power balance. The three arrangements could ensure the bus voltage stability at a value of 24 Volts. The variations in the battery group configurations cause different battery consumption levels. The three-battery group configuration has a lower power consumption rate of 0.1% than other battery group configurations. Variations in the battery management algorithms affect power balance, bus voltage stability, and battery electricity consumption.  The result showed the best power balance achieved by an algorithm without counting a value-based state of charge (SoC). The algorithm also committed that the difference between the supply and demand equal to 0 Watts.  For the voltage stability, the algorithms that were counting a value-based SoC can maintain bus voltage stability at a value of 24 Volts.  Nevertheless, other algorithms that rely on less than one SoC value-based and have the lowest mean value of SoC reduction are equal to 0.19%.


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