theories in international relations 1. realism 2. liberalism 3. constructivism
TRANSCRIPT
Realism and Neorealism1. Factors that gave rise to
realism2. Principles of classical realism3. Components of realism4. Limitations of classical realism5. Neorealism – Waltz6. Neorealism – unipolarity,
bipolarity, multipolarity7. Implications of realism and
neo-realism
1. Factors that gave rise to realism
The collapse of the effectiveness of the League of Nations, in part due to German and Japanese resistance, but also due to the non-involvement of the U.S.
The collapse of democratic processes in Germany, Italy and Japan, replaced by fascist, Nazi or militarist governments
The inability to create a truly just and representative group of nations in Central Europe
1. Factors that gave rise to realism
Crises in the world economic system, culminating in the Great Depression (peaking in 1929-1930)
World War II, with its total war, attacks against civil populations, and use of genocide (and other humanitarian abuses)
The creation of nuclear weapons, then nuclear deterrence
1. Factors that gave rise to realism
The recognition that the European state system had not found any permanent solution to warfare, nor a way to establish a permanent and stable international order.
The emergence of ideologically driven warfare and conflict, i.e. conflict driven by democratic, authoritarian, communist, neo-colonialist and anti-colonial ideas.
2. Principles of classical realism (Morgenthau)
(1): Politics, like society in general, is governed by objective laws rooted in human nature: these laws are objective and not opinion – can be tested to ascertain – do not challenge these laws!
(2): Interests defined in terms of power: how much power you have in comparison to others determines how you will behave.
(3) Politics as an autonomous sphere distinguished from economics, ethics, or religion: leaders think and act in terms of power.
→ economics – interest defined as wealth→ politics – interest defined as power, objective category which is universally valid, unaffected by time and place`
2. Principles of classical realism
(4): National Interest: states, the main actors of the international system, have interests (interest is what keeps people together). Power is used to obtain that interest.
(5): Policies should be judged according to how they affect the power of the state.
3. Key components of the realist position
Must look at actual 'real' situation in the world, including negative aspects
Emphasis on power, and augmentation of power in international relations
Emphasis on the state as the key actor in international relations
Emphasis on national interests (defined as power) as the basis for the motivation of leadership groups
3. Key components of the realist position
Emphasis on behaviour and outcomes, not ideas
Tends to have a negative view of human nature as being essentially self-interested
3. Key components of the realist position – Balance of Power
Order in the international system is based on the distribution of power – balance of power
As a theory, balance of power predicts that rapid changes in international power and status—especially attempts by one state to conquer a region—will provoke counterbalancing actions.
The theory argues that there is a general tendency in all systems for the weaker states to ally together against the greatest emerging threat to the system.
3. Key components of the realist position – Balance of Power
Checks and balances.
(a): no single nation becomes dominant;
(b): that most of its members continue to survive;
(c): that large scale war does not occur. States therefore make and break alliances (re-balance) as threats emerge against their security.
Therefore you get this system of equilibrium.
4. Limitations of classical realism1. The 'objective laws of society'
(Morgenthau) have been very hard to define or define.
2. Accounts of international relations, economics and politics have failed to reach any consensus that accurately predicts or fully explains complex international behaviour (Morgenthau determinism)
3. Self-interest and power turn out to be insufficient to explain the behaviour of nations and government. Ideas and ideologies also have a crucial role
4. Limitations of classical realism
4. Assessments of power can be inaccurate, and do not always account for the problem of 'political will‘ (ex: search for economic wealth)
5. In spite of the relative dominance of political realism and foreign policy and strategic affairs, a large number of cooperative international groupings have emerged since World War II.
5. Neorealism - Waltz Neo-realism seeks to explain the importance of
structure in the international system.
Structure of the international system will shape international outcomes
Sometimes called Structural Realism
Abandoned reliance on the nature of human beings to account for discord and cooperation in world politics, but focused instead on the competitive, anarchic nature of world politics as a whole.
Anarchy defined as absence of rules in IR
5. Neorealism - Waltz
Emphasis is on the notion of self-help - safer to rely on your own means (weapons, etc…) to defend yourself as opposed to relying on allies of uncertain reliability
Security dilemma – when states take actions to ensure their own security, they decrease the security of other states (action-reaction logic)
5. Neorealism – unipolarity, bipolarity, multipolarity
International System: the international system can be characterized according to:
The system structure: how many poles of power are there? – Unipolar (examples?)– Bipolar– Multipolar
5.1 - Bipolarity Within a bipolar world or a world dominated by two
coalitions, does parity (approximate equality between the two sides), or preponderance (where one side is stronger than the other), create peace?
Some argue that the parity of a balance of power or bipolarity brings war because each state is tempted by the fact that there is an even chance of victory in a war. And that only preponderance brings peace.
Others argue that preponderance encourages war because the larger state is undeterred, and therefore attacks the smaller states. Peace is therefore achieved by having a parity so that no one state can dominate any other.
5.2 - Unipolarity Unipolarity: Since the collapse of the Soviet Union the
U.S. has been the largest economic and military power in the world.
U.S. strategy with regard to the Eurasian continent remains the same as England’s with regard to Europe: to oppose the consolidation of the continent under any single power, whether German, Japanese, Soviet or Chinese.
5.2 - Unipolarity
The main problem with being the most powerful state in the world is that according to the logic of the balance of power, it will provoke a counter-coalition.
Is there a counter-coalition?– The most likely reason is that it is too early in
the process to tell, or that the peaceful nature of democratic regimes has overpowered the logic of the balance of power.
Powers
Units
Economic Political Military Cultural
US √ √ √ √
EU √ √ ?
China √ ?
Toward a Tri-polar System?
6. Implications of realism and neo-realism
(1): Cooperation is very difficult because states are driven by fear of each other (today’s friend can be tomorrow’s enemy).
(2): Since only states matter, international organizations do not.
– The strength, size, number and purpose of international organizations is determined by the distribution of power among states. The implication is that international institutions only reflect the state, and have no independent status.
6. Implications of realism and neo-realism
(3): Relative gains matter. Elaboration: because the struggle for survival is a zero-sum game, A’s gain is B’s loss. Therefore you have to ensure your opponent does not get ahead of you.
Liberalism
1. Historical Background2. Basic Principles3. Liberal Institutionalism4. Democratic Peace
1. Background
Liberalism is the oldest framework of analysis
Liberalism was linked in the nineteenth century to a set of notions on the link between trade, domestic freedom, and peace.
Realism began just prior to the Second World War in response to clumsy international attempts to come to grip with the problem of war
1. Background Adam Smith (Wealth of Nations, 1776),
Montesquieu (1750), and the Manchester Liberals argued that the effect of states trading between each other tended to lead to peace.(1) trade obtains wealth more easily than war (2) trade converts states from systems run by militarists to systems run by middle classes by making the masses wealthy and diverting attention from activities abroad (Comte, Spencer).
2. Liberalism – Basic principles Robert Keohane elaborates that there are
three types of liberalism:
(a). Republican liberalism: argues that republican states (states governed by their citizenry) are more peaceful;
(b). Commercial liberalism: states that trade are more peaceful;
(c). Regulatory liberalism: republican states have a tendency to introduce domestic forms of legal governance and the rule of law to the international sphere, and this makes for greater international peace.
2. Liberalism – Basic principles
(1). The pursuit of territory for the pursuit of wealth: if wealth is based on trade, there is also no point to conquering territory.
(2). Market forces are both more efficient, and by replacing governments, de-politicize the pursuit of wealth.
(3). Free trade creates interdependence which is a disincentive to use force: wars destroy trade, business, wealth, factories, and the delicate system of commerce; increases debt, taxes and government spending; kills skilled people.
3. Liberal Institutionalism – major assumptions
(1): Anarchy can be mitigated by institutions facilitating cooperation.
(2): International institutions are independent actors that can compete with states.
(3): State are not the most important actors in the international system: international institutions also matter and have a large role.
3. Liberal Institutionalism – major assumptions
Institutions help :
(1) Reduce the costs and risks associated with carrying out cooperation by providing coordination information.
(2) Reduce the risk and damage inflicted by a defection from an agreement.
(3): Increase transparency. If each side can see the internal mechanics of the other’s behavior, they will be more reassured that they are not being cheated, and are therefore less likely to leave an agreement through fear of being exploited.
3. Liberal Institutionalism – major assumptions
(4) Manage issue linkage. If over a given issue, the distribution of benefits is not apparently fair, then one of the states can make a side payment to the other state in another issue area.
(5): Facilitate cooperation by making the threat of retaliation to a defection explicit. This would typically be achieved by describing the norms expected of states involved in an interaction, and the punishment of transgression, such as the loss of the opportunity of interacting through the forum → game theory
Institutionalism: when will we see international cooperation and international treaties? Treaties/regimes will arise in many different circumstances
Still acting in terms of consequentialist logic - behavior is based on costs vs. Benefits
Are we richer or safer than they were?interests are defined in longer-term and absolute (not relative) terms
3. Liberal Institutionalism – Conclusions
c) Will be willing to take calculated risks even in collaboration problems
d) Non-state actors likely to play important roles
e) States may enforce collectively when they wouldn’t individually. Institutions provide something to enforce. States enforce the rules agreed to. Rules around which expectations converge.
3. Liberal Institutionalism – Conclusions
4. Democratic Peace In the early 1990s, Bush and later,
Clinton, repeatedly mentioned that the U.S. wants democracy to spread around the world because democracies do not go to war against each other.
(1) Liberal institutions and (2) ideology cause peace
Challenges realism: power does not matter.
Inside out model for peace and stability
4. Democratic Peace(1): Structural: institutional constraints;
The same domestic institutions that encourage peaceful negotiations and compromise, cause democratic states to interact with each other on that same basis.
The more mature the democracy, the greater is the above tendency.
Democratic interactions with non-democratic states does not lead to the same output
4. Democratic Peace(2): Normative or idealogical basis
– Liberal Ideas: Cosmopolitan; liberty and toleration for life and property. Tyranny over individuals is not democracy.
– Liberal democracies are therefore seen as reasonable, predictable, and trustworthy.
– Citizens can identify other liberal states and therefore treat them preferentially (Legal zones of law).
– Citizens only support war if it brings peace, and are therefore more likely to support war against illiberal states. Illiberal leaders are therefore selected-out.
Constructivism
1. Challenges to Realism and Liberalism
2. Basic Assumptions
3. Constructivist Analysis
4. Implications for International Politics
1. Challenges to realism and liberalism The constructist framework challenges realism
on the grounds that it cannot explain how (1) change occurs, and how (2) identities are formed. – It asks of neo-realism the question of how
much do structures constrain and determine the actions of actors
It challenges liberalism on the grounds that material interests, even economic ones, cannot be taken as given. They are constructed through shared norms, ideas, beliefs and identities.
2. Basic assumptions
(1). Ideas matter and have an independent effect upon human behavior and organization.
– Waltz: If “anarchy is what states make of it”, there is nothing that is inevitable or unchangeable in the international system.
– Katzenstein, “The culture of national security: norms and identity in world politics”. A typical realist issue (security) seen as culturally determined
(2). Ideas affect what people want and how they want to go about getting it (preferences/ strategies).
2. Basic assumptions
Non-material (ideational) structures are just as important as material structures
One cannot understand behavior without understanding its context
Non-universality of laws Politics is determined by perceptions
2. Basic assumptions Reality of IR It is constructed from the collected sets of
beliefs of those within that field (academic, not only policy)
Actor preferences are shaped both internally & externally
Actor behavior is shaped by elite beliefs, identities and social norms
Impossibility of isolation of an event/behavior from its context
What is considered cognitively possible?
Discourse matters - how things are talked about determines their meaning - "genocide", "war," "pollution" are all social terms and what behaviors constitute such behavior reflect intersubjective agreement
2. Basic assumptions
3. Constructivist Analysis The point of departure for a constructivist theory
of foreign policy is its critique of the concept of utility-maximizing homo politicus (at the core of neorealist approach) and homo oeconomicus (at the core of liberal analysis)
According to this concept, ideas, values or norms play a role as instruments for asserting and justifying given interests
Introducing the concept of interests as ideas/values/norms
vs interests as power (realism), vs interesrt as wealth (liberalism)
3. Constructivist Analysis Constructivist theory, by contrast,
emphasizes the independent influence of these variables.
According to the constructivist view, actors’ actions are guided by norms, i.e. by intersubjectively shared, value-based, specifically located expectations of appropriate behavior
The assumption of the independent influence of norms works well with the concept of the self-regarding, rational homo sociologicus
3. Constructivist Analysis
The logic of appropriateness is based on the inter-subjectively shared, value-based expectations of appropriate behavior
States act according to this logic rather than logic of consequences
Logic of appropriateness (what is right or wrong) vs. logic of consequences (what is good or bad for me).
In the constructivist view, a norm’s impact will be greater the more actors within a social system share it and the more precisely it distinguishes appropriate from inappropriate behavior.
4. Constructivist Analysis and Realism
In neorealist explanations, norms only develop an impact on actors’ behavior to the extent that compliance with them can be enforced by powerful actors, or that they are complied with by weaker actors in anticipatory fear of sanctions.
From this viewpoint, it is not the norms themselves but the power behind them that causes the norm-compliant behavior that can be observed.
5. Constructivist Analysis and Liberalism
From this utilitarian-liberal perspective, the independent variables are interests, not norms.
According to constructivists, norms work by matching actors’ interests and therefore by serving actors as a "resource" with which to assert their interests.
According to constructivists, norms do not follow logically from actors’ interests, as is the case in rationalist models, but precede them.
In the constructivist view, norms also have a constitutive effect, i.e. "norms legitimize goals and thus define actors' interests“.
5. Constructivist Analysis and Liberalism
4. Implications of constructivism for International Politics
1. Institutions reflect an intersubjective understanding among states that is far less under the control of states and has far more normative than material content.
2. Major conclusion is institutions are not creating rules so much as defining NORMS and IDENTITIES and over long periods of time these alter what states see as appropriate
3. Types of problems: Problems vary but what constitutes a problem depends not only on material factors (who is the polluter and who is the pollutee) but also on norms about what behaviors are appropriate and what are inappropriate
4. Implications of constructivism for International Politics
4. Types of effects of regimes and other forms of international organization: – They have effects that depend on the
social processes they generate. Not so much about compliance but about socialization and internalization of norms of behavior, which make the need for monitoring and enforcement lessen, if not vanish