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Published bySara Hancock Modified over 9 years ago
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Approaches to the Study of International Relations
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Realist Approach to World Politics Key ActorsInternational system, sovereign states View of thePower-seeking, selfish Individualantagonistic View of the stateSeeks power, unitary actor with a defined national interest View of the inter-Anarchy, stability thru balance national systemof power system Belief about Potential for change slow; structural Changechange also low TheoristsThucydides, St. Augustine, Machiavelli, Hobbes, Morganthau
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Liberal Approach to World Politics Key ActorsStates, non governmental groups, international organizations View of theBasically good, ability to cooperate and Individualcompromise View of the stateNot an autonomous actor, many different interests and actors in the system View of the inter-Interdependence among actors, national systeminternational society, anarchy Belief aboutProbable and desirable process Change TheoristsMontesquieu, Kant, Wilson, Koehane
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Marxist Approach to World Politics Key ActorsSocial classes, transnational elites, MNC’s View of theActions determined by economic classes Individual View of the stateState is agent of international capitalist class View of the inter-Highly stratified and dominated by national system international capitalist classes Belief aboutRadical change and revolution sought Change TheoristsMarx, Lenin, Hobson, Wallerstein
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Indicators of World Inequality One ‑ fifth of the world's population are living in extreme poverty. 70 per cent of the world's poor and two ‑ thirds of the world's illiterates are women. One ‑ third of the world's children are undernourished. Half the world's population lacks regular access to the most essential drugs. 100 million children live or work on the street In 1998 the 4 least developed countries attracted less than $US3 billion in direct foreign investment, 0.4 per cent of the global total. The combined wealth of the world's 200 richest people reached $US 1 trillion in 1999; the combined income of 582 million people a living in the 43 least developed counties is $US 1.46 billion
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More than 30,000 children die a day from easily preventable diseases. Since 1980 more than $US 1.3 trillion has been transferred from less developed countries to more developed countries in debt interest payments, yet a size of total debt has not decreased. Each year the developing world pays the West nine times more in debt repayments than it receives in aid. In 1996 Comic Relief in the UK raised an estimated 26 million in the world's biggest telethon. This is roughly what Africa pays out in debt in one day. To achieve universal provision of basic services in developing countries would cost $80 billion/ year. (Sources: World Health Organization, United Nations,World Bank, Jubilee 2000
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