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Major Ideologies of IR Goldstein, Joshua A & Pevehouse, John C. International Relations. 9 th Ed. 2010-2011 Update. Pearson.
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Things to remember… States are what you have grown up calling “countries”. When discussing IR, we refer to these countries as states. So when I say “states are at war” I am not referring to North Carolina fighting South Carolina. Actors are simply the states that are acting in some manner with or against another. States are political, nations are cultural.
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Realism Explains IR in terms of power and how states use their power against each other Looks at how the world really is instead of what it ought to be.
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Realism Famous realists: o Sun Tzu (6 th century BCE): chinese strategist, showed rulers how to use their power to conquer dangerous neighbors; The Art of War o Thucydides (5 th century BCE): account of Peloponnesian War focusing on power of Greek city-state. “the strong do what they have the power to do and the weak accept what they have to accept.”
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Realism Famous realists: o Thomas Hobbes: absence of government leads to a free-for-all where people only fulfill their own self interest.; favored strong monarch (Leviathon). o Hans Morgenthau: international politics are governed by universal laws based on national interests; no nation has “God on its side”.
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Realism Power o The ability to get another actor to do what it would not otherwise have done. o If one gets its way a lot, then it must be powerful. Factors affecting power o Size, income level, armed forces
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Realism Example of power o Bombing of Pearl Harbor o Destroyed US military capabilities in the Pacific; gave Japan short term superiority. o US had greater power resources due to income levels and rebuilt. o in the long term, US matched and overwhelmed Japanese power.
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Realism Key terms o Sovereignty – the right of a state to rule its own territory o Balance of power – one or more states use their power to balance that of another group of states. o Security dilemma – when actions taken by one state (e.g. military force)threaten the security of other states. o Alliances – coalition of states that coordinate their actions to accomplish a common goal.
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Liberalism Liberal approaches to IR are more optimistic than realism. 21 st century has seen shift towards more liberal views; fewer large scale wars being fought. Tries to explain how peace and cooperation are possible
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Liberalism Immanuel Kant (19 th cent) offered 3 suggestions for how peace could be obtained Reciprocity principle; suggested a world federation similar to the modern UN Peace depends on internal character of govt. Trade would promote peace by allowing both states to increase wealth. (realists disagree)
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Liberalism Key theories o International regimes: rules govern how states interact; each state expects all will play by the same rules. o Collective security: broad alliance of major states in international system to protect selves from aggressive actor. (UN Security Council) o Democratic peace: democracies almost never fight each other; the more democracies, the less wars.
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Social Constructivism o Draws heavily on identity principle o Asks how actors define their national interests, threats to those interests, and relationships to one another. o What past generation thought was threatening may not be so with later generations
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Social Changing views on what we see as threatening o Pirates invaded ports, pillaged, murdered, and disobeyed international law o States used navies to stop them, costing lives and resources o Blackbeard once held the entire city of Charleston SC hostage to get medical supplies o Today: sports teams, movies, kids shows, Halloween costumes.
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Social Marxism o More powerful classes suppress and exploit the less powerful by denying them the surplus they create. o Class struggle leads to revolution which can have an affect on IR. o Revolution usually happens in backward countries (Russia at turn of 20 th century, China in mid 20 th century)
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Social Peace Studies o Focuses on social relations at the individual, domestic, and global level. o Conflict resolution – non-violent means to settle disputes, usually through mediation. o Argues militarism is what leads to war, not necessarily power. Costa Rica has had no army for 50 years but never been invaded despite war in neighboring states
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Summary Realism = dominance principle (US is powerful because of it’s military, which gives it power over others) Liberalism = reciprocity principle (European Union allows many European states to benefit from trade, tourism) Social = identity principle (developing nations have common goals and may work together)
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