INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS THEORY INTRODUCTION HC 35.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
IR Social Constructivist theories
Advertisements

IR2501 Theories of International Relations
Approaches to European Security
MDAW 2013: DCH & MBK.  Realism  Idealism  Liberalism  Marxism  Critical Theory(s)
POSC 2200 – Theoretical Approaches
Theories of International Relations
Dr. Bezen Balamir Coşkun
Liberalism Central Assumptions and Propositions View of history: progressive change possible – Material: prosperity through technological progress, economic.
RealPolitik or Power Politics
The Prisoners’ Dilemma and IR theories International Relations.
Realist and Neorealist Theories of War
Plan for Today: Understanding Classical Realism and Neorealism
Realism.
INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS THEORY IN POLICY DEBATE Houston Urban Debate League.
Neo-realists – neo-liberals The debate to date. Neo-realism Neo-Liberalist.
REALISM. Origins of Realism  The realist theory of international relations came into being during the time of the Great Depression of 1929 when the economies.
Chapter 2: Theories of World Politics
Institutions and their role in shaping European Security
IR 501 Lecture Notes (2) Realism
ESSENTIALS OF INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
Finishing classical realism. Neorealism. Other contemporary realism.
Topics Today: Neorealism and Other Contemporary Realism 1.Completing introduction to neorealist principles. 2.Introduction to another version of contemporary.
Realism. Assumptions  States: unitary, rational actors -Treaty of Westphalia (1648)  Anarchy: no central government  Survival: primary objective 
International Relations
Institutions and Environmental Cooperation. Today Types of global environmental problems The role of international institutions (regimes): realist vs.
INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS THEORIES: CONSTRUCTIVISM
Why theories are important for foreign policy? Theories provide different policy options and contain different assumptions about how the world works.
States and International Environmental Regimes. Today: Examine IR theories that focus on states as units of analysis in explaining cooperation Are these.
Chapter 15 Comparative International Relations. This (that is the LAST!) Week.
Social Constructivism
Plan for Today: Constructivism 1. Midterm exam format. 2. Continuing introduction to constructivism: what kinds of arguments about norms/ identities? 3.
Social Constructivism
Three perspectives on international politics IR theories: Constructivism.
Κονστρουκτιβισμός
INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS THEORIES: PLURALISM OR LIBERALISM
Homework 1. What is this study based on? How did the group determine levels of corruption? 2. How have the countries at the top of the list (least corrupt.
IR theories: Institutionalism
POSC 1000(056) Introduction to Politics Politics and Governance the Global Level/Conclusions and Exam Advice Russell Alan Williams.
Three perspectives on international politics IR theories: Realism.
1 Understanding Global Politics Lecture 4: Neo-Realism/ Structural Realism.
PLS 341: American Foreign Policy Theories in IR The Idea-Based -isms.
Introducing the IR Paradigms
International Relations
POL 3080 Approaches to International Relations Introduction
WHY DO STATES DO WHAT THEY DO? THE REALIST (I.E., THE DOMINANT) PERSPECTIVE States have primacy as unitary intl. actors (while leaders come and go, states.
Liberal Approaches to International Relations POL 3080 Approaches to IR.
KYLE IR 101. WHAT IS IT? DEFINITION Study of international events and actors.
Security in International Relations Prepared for Junior Int'l Politics class at NENU, Fall 2015.
Constructivism: The Social Construction of International Politics POL 3080 Approaches to IR.
‘Anarchy is What States Make of It’
NEO-REALISM AND NEO-LIBERALISM THEORIES
The Great Debates in International Relations 1 st Great Debate (20s & 30s) 2 nd Great Debate (50s-80s) 3 rd Great Debate (80s & on)
International Relations Theory A New Introduction
Topics for today Events of the day/week Review: Constructivist theory Wednesday, 2/27/2008Hans Peter Schmitz.
Prof. Murat Arik School of Legal Studies Kaplan University PO420 Global Politics Unit 2 Approaches to World Politics and Analyzing World Politics.
IR 306 Foreign Policy Analysis
LG514 International Relations Theory Lecture 11: Overview/Review: Theorising International Relations in the 21 st Century Ken McDonagh School of Law and.
Intensive Readings in International Relations Fall 2006 Peking University Instructor: Ji Mi ( 吉宓)
Prof. Murat Arik School of Legal Studies Kaplan University PO420 Global Politics Unit 2 Approaches to World Politics and Analyzing World Politics.
International Relations
Outline Prisoners’ Dilemma Security Dilemma Structural realism (Waltz)
Introduction to International Relations
Introduction to Global Politics
Realism Oliver-Daddow compares the neo-liberalism and neo-realism. There is three assumptions in both sides that state is central actor, states are sovereign.
IR Theory No Limits Debate.
Introduction to Global Politics
Theories of International Relations
Presentation transcript:

INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS THEORY INTRODUCTION HC 35

Discussion Overview  Three Theories: Realism (Neo-Realism); Liberalism (Neo-Liberal Institutionalism); Constructivism

Realism (Neo-Realism)  Nature of the International System: Anarchy  For the realist, anarchy signifies that there is no supranational authority that is able to provide security  Disclaimer: International anarchy in this sense does not necessarily imply disorder or conflict.  Rather, it is a framework for interpreting other “players” actions.  Differs from anarchy advocated in counterplans and kritiks. Anarchist philosophy seeks to end state coercion while realists are distinctly statist.

Realism (Neo-Realism)  Primary Actors: States (“unit-level” politics)  Because of anarchy at the international level, states revert to “state of nature” and act in their own self- interest (think Machiavelli, Hobbes).  Neo-realists (also called Structural Realists) examine how non-state structures influence decisions, but still place states at the center.

Realism (Neo-Realism)  Key Interest: Survival (Classical Realism) Security (Neo-Realism)  Because there is no guarantor of security at the international level, states pursue survival.  Classical Realists viewed states as inherently aggressive, checked only by other powers  Neo-realists argue that states are merely interested in existence (post-WWII security dilemma furthers this).  Relative gains problems create zero-sum international order where states might forego perceived gains if other states make greater gains. This discourages cooperation.

Realism (Neo-Realism)  Applications  Hegemony What international system is most stable: hegemonic, bipolar, multipolar? Can troop reduction lead to relative gains for the United States by balancing against more meaningful threats? Does this make the topic bi-directional?  Balance of Power, Balance of Threat, Securitization  Does deterrence apply to counter-insurgency strategy (Afghanistan, Iraq) and asymmetric warfare (counter- terrorism)?

Liberalism (Neo-Liberal Institutionalism)  Nature of the International System: Anarchy  For the liberalist, anarchy signifies that there is no supranational authority that is able to enforce agreements.  While liberalism and realism share the assumption of international anarchy, neoliberals criticize realists for underestimating opportunities for cooperation within that system.  Question becomes how to create an international system that encourages cooperation.

Liberalism (Neo-Liberal Institutionalism)  Primary Actors: Pluralist System (states at the center, but also corporations, international organizations, non-governmental organizations (NGOs), law and protocol)  States cooperate with non-state entities when in their personal interest.  Because there is no international enforcement mechanism to ensure states follow through on agreements, cheating becomes the central concern.  Leads to desire to create “sticky” institutions that hold states to cooperative agreements.

Liberalism (Neo-Liberal Institutionalism)  Key Interest: Preferences (Utility determined by the state)  Unlike realism, where states worry about relative gains and would forego cooperation under certain situations, institutionalists seek absolute gains.  Argue that even in situations where partners make relatively greater gains, cooperation on common interests creates “sticky” alliances.  Game Theory describes methods states use to determine when cooperation is in their best interests (prisoner’s dilemma is most common).

Liberalism (Neo-Liberal Institutionalism)  Applications  Cases/Counter plans: Alliances/Coalition Building United Nations International Law Economic Interests/International Corporations  Problem of changing preferences and shifting alliances (especially true with democratic systems in wartime)

Constructivism  Nature of the International System: Socially Constructed/Contingent  Unlike realism and liberalism, whose causal epistemology draws from positivist (scientific) and structuralist (empirical) traditions, constructivism is post- positivist, deconstructing the ontological assumptions of other IR theories.  “Anarchy is what states make of it…” –Alexander Wendt

Constructivism  Key Actors: Shared Ideas (technically, states are still the key actors, but ideas underlie state paradigms about the international system)  Theory developed as a possible explanation for the failure of dominant theories to predict major international events (e.g. fall of the Soviet Union)  Identities and Interests are constructed by cultural norms and shared philosophies.  While the primary function of constructivism is as a critique of leading IR theories, does it advocate anything (for the purposes of policy debate)?

Constructivism  Key Interests: Define/Determine Core Ideas; Cooperate to redefine International System  This element of constructivism has been criticized for 1. Being no more than a post-positivist variant of neo- liberalism due to its agreement that social agency shapes state preferences. 2. Not being truly post-modern due to its rational discourse about how ideas can address and solve “external” problems.

NEO-REALISMNEO-LIBERAL INSTITUTIONALISM CONSTRUCTIVISM NATURE OF THE INTERNATIONAL SYSTEM Anarchy (No international security mechanism) Anarchy (No international mechanism to enforce agreements) Socially Contingent/Socially Constructed KEY ACTOR(S) StatesPlural (States, Corporations, International Organizations, NGOs) Shared Ideas KEY INTEREST(S) Security/SurvivalPreferences (individual utility to the state) Define Core Ideas Cooperate on Shared Interests