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.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
IR2501 Theories of International Relations
Advertisements

Structure and Agency in Foreign Policy Analysis
To What Extent Should We Embrace Internationalism?
Liberalism Central Assumptions and Propositions View of history: progressive change possible – Material: prosperity through technological progress, economic.
Major Ideologies of IR Goldstein, Joshua A & Pevehouse, John C. International Relations. 9 th Ed Update. Pearson.
Week 2: Major Worldviews January 10, 2007
History of Canada Standards:
POLS 425 U.S. Foreign Policy U.S.-China Relations: How Should the U.S. Deal with a Rising Power?
Chapter 5 Power, Conflict, and Policy
Theory and World Politics
ESSENTIALS OF INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
2.2. The Liberal Challenge Learning Objectives: Understand how Liberals describe global politics Identify the Liberal view of power Compare and Contrast.
Realism. Assumptions  States: unitary, rational actors -Treaty of Westphalia (1648)  Anarchy: no central government  Survival: primary objective 
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.
Foreign Policy and National Security
The Early Republic Pre-Class Coach McCage. The Early Republic 0 All of the following are defining characteristics of the era of the Early Republic EXCEPT.
Chapter 15 Comparative International Relations. This (that is the LAST!) Week.
International Political Economy The Rational Choice Approach in IPE Ch. 5 Lecture 8.
Liberalism: Conclusion Lecture 14. The Question of the Month How Can Countries Move from Anarchy, War of All Against All, to Cooperation? Security Dilemma.
INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS THEORY INTRODUCTION HC 35.
INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS THEORIES: PLURALISM OR LIBERALISM
Liberalism Michael Doyle Lecture 3 Kaisa Ellandi.
Operační program Vzdělávání pro konkurenceschopnost Název projektu: Inovace magisterského studijního programu Fakulty ekonomiky a managementu Registrační.
Plan for Today: Forms of Liberalism in IR 1.Introducing major shared principles of liberalism – domestic and international. 2.Summary introduction to liberal.
THE EUROPEAN UNION AND THE UNITED NATIONS. Cooperation between EU and UN  Over the years the EU has established a strong relationship with the UN. Co-operation.
Political Concepts An Introduction To Political Theory and Statehood.
People and Government Mr. Dodson.
Introducing the IR Paradigms
International Relations
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.
Liberalism & “Radical” Theories John Lee Department of Political Science Florida State University.
Security in International Relations Prepared for Junior Int'l Politics class at NENU, Fall 2015.
‘Anarchy is What States Make of It’
The Great Debates in International Relations 1 st Great Debate (20s & 30s) 2 nd Great Debate (50s-80s) 3 rd Great Debate (80s & on)
Chapter 1: Principles of Government Pope 2016Pope 2016.
Government S-1740 Lecture 3: Explaining Law Compliance INTERNATIONAL LAW Summer 2008.
UNIT 4 revision The UK and the wider world EUROPE.
Canadian History How did the French and English influence Canada?
IR306 FOREIGN POLICY ANALYSIS INTERDEPENDENCE IN INTERNATIONAL SYSTEM - LIBERALISM.
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
Theories about integration and enlargement Lecture 2.
Intensive Readings in International Relations Fall 2006 Peking University Instructor: Ji Mi ( 吉宓)
Canadian History How did the French and English influence Canada?
International Relations
Week14: The U.s. and East asia.
System, State and Individual
Power & IR theorıes.
Canadian History How did the French and English influence Canada?
Canadian History How did the French and English influence Canada?
Canadian History How did the French and English influence Canada?
Systemic & Dyadic Explanations of Interstate Conflict
World Politics Under a system of Anarchy
POLI 140: Mar. 7, 2017 Lecture #3: Liberalism.
History of Canada Standards:
UNIT 3: The Start of a New Nation!.
Chapter 8: Political Geography
Canadian History How did the French and English influence Canada?
Theories of International Relations
Canadian History How did the French and English influence Canada?
Canadian History How did the French and English influence Canada?
STATES & NON-STATE ACTORS
Theories of International Relations
WHY SHOULD YOU CARE ABOUT THE CONTENT OF THIS CLASS?
IR School of Thought: Constructivism
Theories of International Relations
Foundations of Government
Presentation transcript:

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 countries) made efforts to prevent future corruption? 3. What kind of faults have been found with this survey? What do you think of the validity of the survey? 4. Take a look at the map and the varying levels of corruption. What do you think about it? Where are the most corrupt and least corrupt countries concentrated?

International Relations Theory & The Morocco-UK Relationship 5/12/14

Defining basic IR terms State ▫A territory where a population lives that has a permanent government which the population pays its allegiance to and which is recognized diplomatically by other states Theory ▫Seeks to explain past state behavior and predict the future behavior of states Anarchy ▫Not absence of rules, but absence of central government to enforce rules

Important Theories Realism Liberalism Constructivism

Realism The international system is ANARCHIC, no central government exists The STATE is the primary actor States are rational actors ▫They advance their national interest by making rational decisions Power and Security are the most important ▫Self-help world ▫States will make decisions that help them feel secure Morality isn’t relevant in politics Zero-sum game

Realism ▫Hegemonic Stability Theory  Based in realism  Hegemony: influence or control over another country  Theory basically argues that the international political system is most stable when one state is powerful

Realism “The strong do what they want and the weak do what they must”

Liberalism Human nature is basically good Bad behavior (war) is due to inadequate social institutions and miscommunication between leaders ▫Countries can cooperate and mutually benefit International organizations, like the UN and EU are central and important Essentially about democracy

Liberalism Democratic peace theory ▫The theory posits that democracies are less likely to go to to war with each other  Ex: the U.S. and UK are both democracies, war between them is unlikely ▫A very widely held theory

Constructivism “emphasizes the impact of ideas, identities, norms, and culture in world politics” –Tufts IR guide Materialism not important (power and trade aren’t)

Example of Constructivism For example, how the U.S. views an atomic bomb in North Korea is different from how it views one in the UK ▫Materially—an atomic bomb is an atomic bomb ▫But it takes on different meanings ▫The U.S. reacts to social relationship differently  To North Korea, U.S. has hostile relationship, interest to resist  To UK, U.S. has mutually beneficial relationship, no interest in containing them

Videos! Liberalism ▫ E8https:// E8 Realism ▫ NQ&list=PL9122B69A0D2A0639 Constructivism ▫ XIhttps:// XI

Morocco and the UK (and applying some of those theories!) The two countries recently celebrated 800 years of diplomatic relations! In King John of England ▫Sent 1 st embassy to Morocco ▫Hope to make friends with Sultan Mohamed Ennassir  Wanted his support in fighting European enemies  Which theory could describe this situation?

UK & Morocco Trade ▫First trade mission by the UK to Morocco was established in 1550 ▫English traders granted special status so trade expanded quickly ▫“In 2012, bilateral trade in goods between the two countries passed £1bn for the first time” (gov.UK) ▫The UKTI office in Casa helps business in Morocco ▫What would a constructivist say about trade?

British Control of Tangier ▫Britain controls Tangier against Morocco’s wishes  Sultan Moulay Ismail fought against this  Britain eventually found it too costly to maintain ▫Explained by realism?  Britain hope to gain territory to maintain its security  Morocco hoped to gain territory to maintain its security  Both were acting rationally, as unitary actors

18 th and 19 th Century Relations Treaties of Peace and Commerce in 1721 and 1760 Morocco remained independent through this time period ▫Part of this could be due to Britain’s commitment to maintaining the Kingdom, as this would protect Britain’s interests in Gibralter  Again, a very realist view  Britain acting in its own security, keeping this relationship in order to feel secure and gain power

Relations today Arab Partnership ▫2011, UK announced its commitment to help political change happen in the MENA region ▫3 goals (from gov.uk)  Encourage greater political participation  Increase gov’t transparency and limit corruption  Supporting media to create democratic debate “British and Moroccan ministers have frequent contact on a wide range of political issues including political reform and human rights, and we cooperate in international forums like the United Nations.”