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International relations theory

International relations theory is the study of international relations (IR) from a theoretical perspective. It seeks to explain behaviors and outcomes in international politics. The four most prominent schools of thought are realism, liberalism, constructivism, and rational choice.[1] Whereas realism and liberalism make broad and specific predictions about international relations, constructivism and rational choice are methodological approaches that focus on certain types of social explanation for phenomena.[2]

International relations, as a discipline, is believed to have emerged after World War I with the establishment of a Chair of International Relations, the Woodrow Wilson Chair held by Alfred Eckhard Zimmern[3] at the University of Wales, Aberystwyth.[4] The modern study of international relations, as a theory, has sometimes been traced to realist works such as E. H. Carr's The Twenty Years' Crisis (1939) and Hans Morgenthau's Politics Among Nations (1948).[5][6]

The most influential IR theory work of the post-World War II era was Kenneth Waltz's Theory of International Politics (1979)[citation needed], which pioneered neorealism. Neoliberalism (or liberal institutionalism) became a prominent competitive framework to neorealism, with prominent proponents such as Robert Keohane and Joseph Nye.[citation needed] During the late 1980s and 1990s, constructivism emerged as a prominent third IR theoretical framework, in addition to existing realist and liberal approaches. IR theorists such as Alexander Wendt, John Ruggie, Martha Finnemore, and Michael N. Barnett helped pioneer constructivism. Rational choice approaches to world politics became increasingly influential in the 1990s, in particular with works by James Fearon, such as the bargaining model of war.[citation needed]

There are also "post-positivist/reflectivist" IR theories (which stand in contrast to the aforementioned "positivist/rationalist" theories), such as critical theory.

Early history of the field edit

Early international relations scholarship in the interwar years focused on the need for the balance of power system to be replaced with a system of collective security. These thinkers were later described as "Idealists".[6] The leading critique of this school of thinking was the "realist" analysis offered by Carr.

However, a more recent study, by David Long and Brian Schmidt in 2005, offers a revisionist account of the origins of the field of international relations. They claim that the history of the field can be traced back to late 19th century imperialism and internationalism. The fact that the history of the field is presented by "great debates", such as the realist-idealist debate, does not correspond with the historic evidence found in earlier works: "We should once and for all dispense with the outdated anachronistic artifice of the debate between the idealists and realists as the dominant framework for and understanding the history of the field". Their revisionist account claims that, up until 1918, international relations already existed in the form of colonial administration, race science, and race development.[7]

Realism edit

 
Thucydides author of History of the Peloponnesian War is considered one of the earliest "realist" thinkers.[8]

Realism or political realism[9] has been the dominant theory of international relations since the conception of the discipline.[10] The theory claims to rely upon an ancient tradition of thought which includes writers such as Thucydides, Niccolò Machiavelli, and Thomas Hobbes. Early realism can be characterized as a reaction against interwar idealist thinking. The outbreak of World War II was seen by realists as evidence of the deficiencies of idealist thinking. There are various strands of modern-day realist thinking. However, the main tenets of the theory have been identified as statism, survival, and self-help.

  • Statism: Realists believe that nation states are the main actors in international politics.[11] As such it is a state-centric theory of international relations. This contrasts with liberal international relations theories which accommodate roles for non-state actors and international institutions. This difference is sometimes expressed by describing a realist world view as one which sees nation states as billiard balls, liberals would consider relationships between states to be more of a cobweb.
  • Survival: Realists believe that the international system is governed by anarchy, meaning that there is no central authority.[9] Therefore, international politics is a struggle for power between self-interested states.[12]
  • Self-help: Realists believe that no other states can be relied upon to help guarantee the state's survival.

Realism makes several key assumptions. It assumes that nation-states are unitary, geographically based actors in an anarchic international system with no authority above capable of regulating interactions between states as no true authoritative world government exists. Secondly, it assumes that sovereign states, rather than intergovernmental organizations, non-governmental organizations, or multinational corporations, are the primary actors in international affairs. Thus, states, as the highest order, are in competition with one another. As such, a state acts as a rational autonomous actor in pursuit of its own self-interest with a primary goal to maintain and ensure its own security—and thus its sovereignty and survival. Realism holds that in pursuit of their interests, states will attempt to amass resources, and that relations between states are determined by their relative levels of power. That level of power is in turn determined by the state's military, economic, and political capabilities.

Some realists, known as human nature realists or classical realists,[13] believe that states are inherently aggressive, that territorial expansion is constrained only by opposing powers, while others, known as offensive/defensive realists,[13] believe that states are obsessed with the security and continuation of the state's existence. The defensive view can lead to a security dilemma, where increasing one's own security can bring along greater instability as the opponent(s) builds up its own arms, making security a zero-sum game where only relative gains can be made.

Neorealism edit

Neorealism or structural realism[14] is a development of realism advanced by Kenneth Waltz in Theory of International Politics. It is, however, only one strand of neorealism. Joseph Grieco has combined neo-realist thinking with more traditional realists. This strand of theory is sometimes called "modern realism".[15]

Waltz's neorealism contends that the effect of structure must be taken into account in explaining state behavior. It shapes all foreign policy choices of states in the international arena. For instance, any disagreement between states derives from lack of a common power (central authority) to enforce rules and maintain them constantly. Thus, there is constant anarchy in the international system that makes it necessary for states to obtain strong weapons to guarantee their survival. Additionally, in an anarchic system, states with greater power have a tendency to increase their influence further.[16] According to neo-realists, structure is considered an extremely important element in IR and is defined in a twofold manner as: 1) the ordering principle of the international system, which is anarchy, and 2) the distribution of capabilities across units. Waltz also challenges traditional realism's emphasis on traditional military power, instead characterizing power in terms of the combined capabilities of the state.[17]

Waltz's version of neorealism has frequently been characterized as "Defensive Realism", whereas John Mearsheimer is a proponent of a different version of neorealism characterized as "Offensive Realism."[18]

Liberalism edit

 
Kant's writings on perpetual peace were an early contribution to democratic peace theory.[19]

The precursor to liberal international relations theory was "idealism". Idealism (or utopianism) was viewed critically by those who saw themselves as "realists", for instance E. H. Carr.[20] In international relations, idealism (also called "Wilsonianism" because of its association with Woodrow Wilson) holds that a state should make its internal political philosophy the goal of its foreign policy. For example, an idealist might believe that ending poverty at home should be coupled with tackling poverty abroad. Wilson's idealism was a precursor to liberal international relations theory, which would arise amongst the "institution-builders" after World War I.[citation needed]

Liberalism holds that state preferences, rather than state capabilities, are the primary determinant of state behavior. Unlike realism, where the state is seen as a unitary actor, liberalism allows for plurality in state actions. Thus, preferences will vary from state to state, depending on factors such as culture, economic system or government type. Liberalism also holds that interaction between states is not limited to the political/security ("high politics"), but also economic/cultural ("low politics") whether through commercial firms, organizations or individuals. Thus, instead of an anarchic international system, there are plenty of opportunities for cooperation and broader notions of power, such as cultural capital (for example, the influence of films leading to the popularity of the country's culture and creating a market for its exports worldwide). Another assumption is that absolute gains can be made through co-operation and interdependence—thus peace can be achieved.[citation needed]

The democratic peace theory argues that liberal democracies have almost never made war on one another and have fewer conflicts among themselves. This is seen as contradicting especially the realist theories and this empirical claim is now one of the great disputes in political science. Numerous explanations have been proposed for the democratic peace. It has also been argued, as in the book Never at War, that democracies conduct diplomacy in general very differently from non-democracies. (Neo)realists disagree with Liberals over the theory, often citing structural reasons for the peace, as opposed to the state's government. Sebastian Rosato, a critic of democratic peace theory, points to America's behavior towards left-leaning democracies in Latin America during the Cold War to challenge democratic peace.[21] One argument is that economic interdependence makes war between trading partners less likely.[22] In contrast, realists claim that economic interdependence increases rather than decreases the likelihood of conflict. While the democratic peace theory claims that democracy causes peace, the territorial peace theory claims that the direction of causality is opposite. In other words, peace leads to democracy. The latter theory is supported by the historical observation that peace almost always comes before democracy.[23]

Neoliberalism edit

Neoliberalism, liberal institutionalism or neo-liberal institutionalism[24] is a more recent branch of liberal international relations theory. Unlike traditional liberal theories of international politics, which focus on individual-level or domestic-level explanations, liberal institutionalism emphasizes the influence of systemic factors. Its proponents focus on the role of international institutions in allowing nations to successfully cooperate in an anarchic international system.[citation needed]

Complex interdependence edit

Robert O. Keohane and Joseph S. Nye, in response to neorealism, developed an opposing theory they dubbed "complex interdependence." They explain that "... complex interdependence sometimes comes closer to reality than does realism."[25] In explaining this, they cover the three baseline assumptions in realist thought: first, states are coherent units and are the dominant actors in international relations; second, force is a usable and effective instrument of policy; and third, there is a hierarchy in international politics.

The heart of Keohane and Nye's argument is that, in international politics, there are, in fact, multiple channels that connect societies exceeding the conventional Westphalian system of states. This manifests itself in many forms ranging from informal governmental ties to multinational corporations and organizations. Here they define their terminology: interstate relations are those channels assumed by realists; transgovernmental relations occur when one relaxes the realist assumption that states act coherently as units; transnational applies when one removes the assumption that states are the only units. It is through these channels that political exchange occurs, not through the limited interstate channels that are the focus of realist theory.

Moreover, Keohane and Nye argue that there is not, in fact, a hierarchy among issues, meaning that not only is the martial arm of foreign policy not the supreme tool by which to carry out a state's agenda, but that there are a multitude of different agendas that come to the forefront. The line between domestic and foreign policy becomes blurred in this case, as realistically there is no clear agenda in interstate relations.

Finally, the use of military force is not exercised when complex interdependence prevails. In other words, for countries among which a complex interdependence exists, the role of the military in resolving disputes is negated. However, Keohane and Nye go on to state that the role of the military is in fact important with respect to an "alliance's political and military relations with a rival bloc."[26]

Post-liberalism edit

One version of post-liberal theory argues that within the modern, globalized world, states in fact are driven to cooperate in order to ensure security and sovereign interests. The departure from classical liberal theory is most notably felt in the re-interpretation of the concepts of sovereignty and autonomy. Autonomy becomes a problematic concept in shifting away from a notion of freedom, self-determination, and agency to a heavily responsible and duty laden concept.[citation needed] Importantly, autonomy is linked to a capacity for good governance. Similarly, sovereignty also experiences a shift from a right to a duty. In the global economy, international organizations hold sovereign states to account, leading to a situation where sovereignty is co-produced among "sovereign" states. The concept becomes a variable capacity of good governance and can no longer be accepted as an absolute right. One possible way to interpret this theory, is the idea that in order to maintain global stability and security and solve the problem of the anarchic world system in International Relations, no overarching, global, sovereign authority is created. Instead, states collectively abandon some rights for full autonomy and sovereignty.[27] Another version of post-liberalism, drawing on work in political philosophy after the end of the Cold War, as well as on democratic transitions in particular in Latin America, argues that social forces from below are essential in understanding the nature of the state and the international system. Without understanding their contribution to political order and its progressive possibilities, particularly in the area of peace in local and international frameworks, the weaknesses of the state, the failings of the liberal peace, and challenges to global governance cannot be realised or properly understood. Furthermore, the impact of social forces on political and economic power, structures, and institutions, provides some empirical evidence of the complex shifts currently underway in IR.[28]

Constructivism edit

 
The standing of constructivism as an international relations theory increased after the fall of the Berlin wall (pictured) and Communism in Eastern Europe[29] as this was something not predicted by the existing mainstream theories.[30]

Constructivism or social constructivism[31] has been described as a challenge to the dominance of neo-liberal and neo-realist international relations theories.[32] Michael Barnett describes constructivist international relations theories as being concerned with how ideas define international structure, how this structure defines the interests and identities of states and how states and non-state actors reproduce this structure.[33] The key element of constructivism is the belief that "International politics is shaped by persuasive ideas, collective values, culture, and social identities." Constructivism argues that international reality is socially constructed by cognitive structures, which give meaning to the material world.[34] Whereas rational choice approaches assume that actors follow a "logic of consequences", constructivist perspectives suggest that they adhere to a "logic of appropriateness". The theory emerged from debates concerning the scientific method of international relations theories and theories role in the production of international power.[35] Emanuel Adler states that constructivism occupies a middle ground between rationalist and interpretative theories of international relations.[34]

Constructivist theory criticises the static assumptions of traditional international relations theory and emphasizes that international relations is a social construction. And constructivism is critical of the ontological basis of rationalist theories of international relations.[36] Whereas realism deals mainly with security and material power, and liberalism looks primarily at economic interdependence and domestic-level factors, constructivism concerns itself primarily with the role of ideas in shaping the international system; indeed it is possible that there is some overlap between constructivism and realism or liberalism, but they remain separate schools of thought. By "ideas" constructivists refer to the goals, threats, fears, identities, and other elements of perceived reality that influence states and non-state actors within the international system. Constructivists believe that these ideational factors can often have far-reaching effects, and that they can trump materialistic power concerns.

For example, constructivists note that an increase in the size of the U.S. military is likely to be viewed with much greater concern in Cuba, a traditional antagonist of the United States, than in Canada, a close U.S. ally. Therefore, there must be perceptions at work in shaping international outcomes. As such, constructivists do not see anarchy as the invariable foundation of the international system,[37] but rather argue, in the words of Alexander Wendt, that "anarchy is what states make of it".[38] Constructivists also believe that social norms shape and change foreign policy over time rather than security which realists cite.

Marxism edit

 
Antonio Gramsci's writings on the hegemony of capitalism have inspired Marxist international relations scholarship.

Marxist and Neo-Marxist international relations theories are structuralist paradigms which reject the realist/liberal view of state conflict or cooperation; instead focusing on the economic and material aspects. Marxist approaches argue the position of historical materialism and make the assumption that the economic concerns transcend others; allowing for the elevation of class as the focus of study. Marxists view the international system as an integrated capitalist system in pursuit of capital accumulation. A sub-discipline of Marxist IR is Critical Security Studies. Gramscian approaches rely on the ideas of Italian Antonio Gramsci whose writings concerned the hegemony that capitalism holds as an ideology. Marxist approaches have also inspired Critical Theorists such as Robert W. Cox who argues that "Theory is always for someone and for some purpose".[39]

One notable Marxist approach to international relations theory is Immanuel Wallerstein's World-system theory which can be traced back to the ideas expressed by Lenin in Imperialism: The Highest Stage of Capitalism. World-system theory argues that globalized capitalism has created a core of modern industrialized countries which exploit a periphery of exploited "Third World" countries. These ideas were developed by the Latin American Dependency School. "Neo-Marxist" or "New Marxist" approaches have returned to the writings of Karl Marx for their inspiration. Key "New Marxists" include Justin Rosenberg and Benno Teschke. Marxist approaches have enjoyed a renaissance since the collapse of communism in Eastern Europe.

Criticisms of Marxists approaches to international relations theory include the narrow focus on material and economic aspects of life, as well as assuming that the interests pursued by actors are derived from class.

English School edit

The "English School" of international relations theory, also known as International Society, Liberal Realism, Rationalism or the British institutionalists, maintains that there is a 'society of states' at the international level, despite the condition of "anarchy", i.e., the lack of a ruler or world state. Despite being called the English School many of the academics from this school were neither English nor from the United Kingdom.

A great deal of the work of the English School concerns the examination of traditions of past international theory, casting it, as Martin Wight did in his 1950s-era lectures at the London School of Economics, into three divisions:

  • Realist (or Hobbesian, after Thomas Hobbes), which views states as independent competing units
  • Rationalist (or Grotian, after Hugo Grotius), which looks at how states can work together and cooperate for mutual benefit
  • Revolutionist (or Kantian, after Immanuel Kant), which looks at human society as transcending borders or national identities

In broad terms, the English School itself has supported the rationalist or Grotian tradition, seeking a middle way (or via media) between the power politics of realism and the "utopianism" of revolutionism. The English School rejects behavioralist approaches to international relations theory.

One way to think about the English School is that, while some theories identify with just one of the three historical traditions (Classical Realism and Neorealism owe a debt to the Realist or Hobbesian tradition; Marxism to the Revolutionist tradition, for example), English School looks to combine all of them. While there is great diversity within the 'school', much of it involves either examining when and how the different traditions combine or dominate, or focusing on the Rationalist tradition, especially the concept of International Society (which is the concept most associated with English School thinking). The English School maintains that "the most distinguished theories of international politics can be divided into three basic categories: realism, which emphasises the concept of 'international anarchy'; revolutionism, which concentrates on the aspect of the 'moral unity' of the international society, and rationalism, which is based on the aspect of 'international dialogue and intercourse."[40] Therefore, the English School highlights the assiduous interaction between the main strands of IR theory in the understanding of interstate relations.

In Hedley Bull's The Anarchical Society, a seminal work of the school, he begins by looking at the concept of order, arguing that states across time and space have come together to overcome some of the danger and uncertainty of the Hobbesian international system to create an international society of states that share certain interests and ways of thinking about the world. By doing so, they make the world more ordered, and can eventually change international relations to become significantly more peaceful and beneficial to their shared interests.

Functionalism edit

Functionalism is a theory of international relations that arose principally from the experience of European integration. Rather than the self-interest that realists see as a motivating factor, functionalists focus on common interests shared by states. Integration develops its own internal dynamic: as states integrate in limited functional or technical areas, they increasingly find that momentum for further rounds of integration in related areas. This "invisible hand" of integration phenomenon is termed "spillover". Although integration can be resisted, it becomes harder to stop integration's reach as it progresses. This usage, and the usage in functionalism in international relations, is the less common meaning of functionalism.

More commonly, however, functionalism is an argument that explains phenomena as functions of a system rather than an actor or actors. Immanuel Wallerstein employed a functionalist theory when he argued that the Westphalian international political system arose to secure and protect the developing international capitalist system. His theory is called "functionalist" because it says that an event was a function of the preferences of a system and not the preferences of an agent. Functionalism is different from structural or realist arguments in that while both look to broader, structural causes, realists (and structuralists more broadly) say that the structure gives incentives to agents, while functionalists attribute causal power to the system itself, bypassing agents entirely.

Post-structuralism edit

Post-structuralism differs from most other approaches to international politics because it does not see itself as a theory, school or paradigm which produces a single account of the subject matter. Instead, post-structuralism is an approach, attitude, or ethos that pursues critique in particular way. Post-structuralism sees critique as an inherently positive exercise that establishes the conditions of possibility for pursuing alternatives. It states that "Every understanding of international politics depends upon abstraction, representation and interpretation". Scholars associated with post-structuralism in international relations include Richard K. Ashley, James Der Derian, Michael J. Shapiro, R. B. J. Walker,[41] and Lene Hansen.

Post-modernism edit

Post-modernist approaches to international relations are critical of metanarratives and denounces traditional IR's claims to truth and neutrality.[42]

Postcolonialism edit

Postcolonial International relations scholarship posits a critical theory approach to International relations (IR), and is a non-mainstream area of international relations scholarship. Post-colonialism focuses on the persistence of colonial forms of power and the continuing existence of racism in world politics.[43]

Feminist international relations theory edit

Feminist international relations theory applies a gender perspective to topics and themes in international relations such as war, peace, security, and trade. In particular, feminist international relations scholars use gender to analyze how power exists within different international political systems. Historically, feminist international relations theorists have struggled to find a place within international relations theory, either having their work ignored or discredited.[44] Feminist international relations also analyzes how the social and the political interact, often pointing to the ways in which international relations affect individuals and vice versa. Generally, feminist international relations scholars tend to be critical of the realist school of thought for their strong positivist and state-centered approach to international relations, although feminist international scholars who are also realists exist.[44] Feminist International Relations borrows from a number of methodologies and theories such as post-positivism, constructivism, postmodernism, and post-colonialism.

Jean Bethke Elshtain is a key contributor to feminist international relations theory. In her seminal book, Women and War, Elshtain criticizes gender roles inherent in mainstream international relations theory. Particularly, Elshtain decries international relations for perpetuating a tradition of armed civic culture that automatically excludes women/wives.[45] Instead, Elshatin challenges the trope of women as solely passive peacekeepers, using drawing parallels between wartime experiences and her personal experiences from her childhood and later as a mother.[45] Thus, Elshtain has been lauded by some feminist international relations theorists as one of the first theorists to blend personal experience with international relations, thus challenging international relation's traditional preference for positivism.[45]

Cynthia Enloe is another influential scholar in the field of feminist international relations. Her influential feminist international relations text, Bananas, Beaches, and Bases, considers where women fit into the international political system.[45] Similar to Jean Bethke Elshtain, Enloe looks at how the everyday lives of women are influenced by international relations.[45] For example, Enloe uses banana plantations to illustrate how different women are affected by international politics depending on their geographical location, race, or ethnicity.[45] Women, Enloe argues, play a role in international relations whether this work is recognized or not, working as labourers, wives, sex workers, and mothers, sometimes within army bases.[45]

J. Ann Tickner is a prominent feminist international relations theorist with many notable written pieces. For example, her piece "You Just Don't Understand: Troubled Engagements Between Feminists and IR Theorists" examines the misunderstandings that occur between feminist scholars and international relations theorists. Specifically, Tickner argues that feminist international relations theory sometimes works outside of traditional ontological and epistemological international relations structures, instead analyzing international relations from a more humanistic perspective.[44] Thus, Tickner was critical of the ways in which the study of international relations itself excludes women from participating in international relations theorizing. This piece of Tickner's was met with criticism from multiple scholars, such as Robert Keohane, who wrote "Beyond Dichotomy: Conversations Between International Relations and Feminist Theory"[46] and Marianne Marchand, who criticized Tickner's assumption that feminist international relations scholars worked in the same ontological reality and epistemological tradition in her piece "Different Communities/Different Realities/Different Encounters".[47]

Psychological approaches to international relations edit

Psychological approaches to international relations focus on the impact of cognition and emotion on world politics. Through the analysis of political decision making, scholars have examined a broad spectrum of issues ranging from nuclear strategy and nuclear proliferation to deterrence, reassurance, signaling, and bargaining, as well as conflict management and conflict resolution.[48]

In the 1970s, scholars of world politics started drawing on new research in cognitive psychology to explain decisions to cooperate or compete in international relations. Cognitive psychology had assigned cognition a central role in the explanation of human decision-making. It found that people's behavior often deviates from the expectations of the traditional rational choice model. To explain these deviations, cognitive psychologists developed several concepts and theories. These include theories of misperception, the importance of beliefs and schemas in information processing, and the use of analogies and heuristics in interpreting information, among others.

Scholars of international relations took up these insights and applied them to issues in world politics. For example, Robert Jervis identified patterns of leaders' misperception in historical cases that led to unwanted escalation, failures of deterrence, and the outbreak of war.[49] Deborah Welch Larson and Rose McDermott have referred to belief systems and schemas as central drivers of information processing and foreign policy decision-making.[50] Keren Yarhi-Milo has investigated how policy-makers rely on cognitive shortcuts called "heuristics" when they assess the intentions of their adversaries.[51]

In addition to cognitive psychology, social psychology has long inspired research in international relations. Social psychologists have identified a fundamental human need for identity – the way in which a person or a group is, or wishes to be known by others. The resulting identity formation dynamics can contribute to conflicts between and among groups. Scholars of international relations have drawn on insights in social psychology to explore the dynamics of conflict among and between groups as well as processes of conflict management and resolution.[52]

More recently, scholars of international relations have started drawing on emotion research in psychology to shed light on issues in world politics. Research in psychology suggests that affect and emotions are core drivers in decision making and behavior. This has significant consequences for our understanding of foreign policy, escalation to war, conflict resolution, and numerous other issues in world politics. For example, Rose McDermott and Jonathan Mercer were among the first to use these new findings to argue that affective experience can have adaptive functions by facilitating quick and effective decision-making.[53] Thomas Dolan has drawn on affective intelligence theory to show that some emotional responses leaders may have to new events during wartime, such as joy or anxiety, tend to bring about change in their approaches to war, while others, like contentment or frustration, are prone to produce resistance to change.[54] Combining insights from experimental psychology and the sociology of emotions, Robin Markwica has developed "emotional choice theory" as an alternative model to rational choice theory and constructivist perspectives.[55]

Evolutionary perspectives, such as from evolutionary psychology, have been argued to help explain many features of international relations.[56] Humans in the ancestral environment did not live in states and likely rarely had interactions with groups outside of a very local area. However, a variety of evolved psychological mechanisms, in particular those for dealing with inter group interactions, are argued to influence current international relations. These include evolved mechanisms for social exchange, cheating and detecting cheating, status conflicts, leadership, ingroup and outgroup distinction and biases, coalitions, and violence.

Theory in international relations scholarship edit

In a 1955 article, Kenneth W. Thompson characterized IR theory as a recent phenomena in political science scholarship.[57] Thompson distinguished between "normative" IR theory, "general" IR theory, and IR theory as the "basis of action."[57]

In recent years, several IR scholars have remarked on what they see as a trend away from IR theory in IR scholarship.[58][59][60][61][62] The September 2013 issue of European Journal of International Relations and the June 2015 issue of Perspectives on Politics debated the state of IR theory.[63][64] A 2016 study showed that while theoretical innovations and qualitative analyses are a large part of graduate training, journals favor middle-range theory, quantitative hypothesis testing and methodology for publishing.[65]

Alternative approaches edit

Several alternative approaches have been developed based on foundationalism, anti-foundationalism, behaviouralism, structuralism and post-structuralism.

Behavioural international relations theory is an approach to international relations theory which believes in the idea that the social sciences can adapt methodologies from the natural sciences.[66] Accordingly, behavioural scholars reject isms (ideological approaches) because their adherents believe the maxims of their isms are self-evidently true. Instead of testing maxims systematically to determine whether they are true, behaviouralists view proponents of ideological isms as spreading propaganda in the guise of scholarship to guide policy-makers.

The latest formulation of the behavioural approach involves macro-theories or paradigms. That is, theories that can be applied at several levels of analysis.[67] Theories previously developed in economics and sociology are applied to international affairs, while the major isms, such as realism, are reconstituted into a form that can be tested systematically with comprehensive databases. The major international relations paradigms are identified as the Marxian (not ideological Marxism), mass society, community building, and rational actor paradigms, each of which are homes to alternative variants. Behavioural scholars seek to retrofit isms identified above into variants of existing paradigms that can be tested empirically, whereupon the future of international relations theory will move beyond untested maxims to a solid foundation of knowledge.

See also edit

References edit

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  2. ^ Fearon, James; Wendt, Alexander (2002), "Rationalism v. Constructivism: A Skeptical View", Handbook of International Relations, SAGE, pp. 52–72, doi:10.4135/9781848608290.n3, ISBN 9780761963059
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  17. ^ Lamy, Steven (2008). "Contemporary Approaches: Neo-realism and Neo-liberalism," in The Globalisation of World Politics: An Introduction to International Relations, edited by John Baylis, Steve Smith, and Patricia Owens, 4th edition, New York: Oxford University Press,pp.127–128
  18. ^ Snyder, Glenn H. (2002). "Mearsheimer's World-Offensive Realism and the Struggle for Security: A Review Essay". International Security. 27 (1): 149–173. doi:10.1162/016228802320231253. ISSN 0162-2889. JSTOR 3092155. S2CID 57569322.
  19. ^ Gartzke, Erik (1998). "Kant we all just get along? Opportunity, willingness, and the origins of the democratic peace," American Journal of Political Science, Vol. 42, no. 1, pp. 1-27.
  20. ^ Schmidt, Brian C. (1998). The political discourse of anarchy: a disciplinary history of international relations, Albany: State University of new York, p.219
  21. ^ Rosato, Sebastian (2003). "The Flawed Logic of Democratic Peace Theory," American Political Science Review, Vol. 97, No. 4, November, pp. 585–602
  22. ^ Copeland, Dale (1996). "Economic Interdependence and War: A Theory of Trade Expectations," International Security, Vol. 20, No. 4, Spring, pp. 5–41
  23. ^ Hutchison, Marc L.; Starr, Daniel G. (2017). "The Territorial Peace: Theory, Evidence, and Implications". In Thompson, William R. (ed.). Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Politics. Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/acrefore/9780190228637.013.285. ISBN 978-0-19-022863-7.
  24. ^ Sutch, Peter, and Juanita Elias (2006). International Relations: The Basics, New York: Routledge, p. 11
  25. ^ Keohane, Robert O.; Nye, Joseph S. (1997). "Realism and Complex Interdependence". In Crane, George T.; Amawi, Abla (eds.). The Theoretical Evolution of International Political Economy: A Reader. Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 133. ISBN 978-0-19-509443-5.
  26. ^ Keohane & Nye 1997, p. 134.
  27. ^ Chandler, David (2010). International Statebuilding – The Rise of the Post-Liberal Paradigm. Abingdon, Oxon: Routledge. pp. 43–90. ISBN 978-0-415-42118-8.
  28. ^ Richmond, Oliver (2011). A Post-Liberal Peace. Abingdon, Oxon: Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-66784-5.
  29. ^ Walt, Stephen M. (1998). Foreign Policy, No. 110, Special Edition: Frontiers of Knowledge. (Spring, 1998), p. 41: "The end of the Cold War played an important role in legitimizing constructivist t realism and liberalism failed to anticipate this event and had trouble explaining it.
  30. ^ Hay, Colin (2002). Political Analysis: A Critical Introduction, Basingstoke: Palgrave, p. 198
  31. ^ Richard Jackson (November 21, 2008). "Ch 6: Social Constructivism". (PDF). Oxford University Press. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2007-04-23.
  32. ^ Hopf, Ted (1998). "The Promise of Constructivism in International Relations Theory," International Security, Vol. 23, No. 1, Summer, p. 171
  33. ^ Barnett, Michael (2008). "Social Constructivism," in The Globalisation of World Politics, edited by John Baylis, Steve Smith, and Patricia Owens, New York: Oxford University Press, 4th ed., p. 162
  34. ^ a b Adler, Emmanuel, Seizing the middle ground, European Journal of International Relations, Vol .3, 1997, p.319
  35. ^ Fierke, K.M. (2016). "Constructivism," in International Relations Theories: Discipline and Diversity, edited by Tim Dunne, Milja Kurki, and Steve Smith, Oxford: Oxford University Press, p.167
  36. ^ In international relations ontology refers to the basic unit of analysis that an international relations theory uses. For example for neorealists humans are the basic unit of analysis
  37. ^ "The IR Theory Knowledge Base". Irtheory.com. 2015-04-03. Retrieved 2017-04-04.
  38. ^ Wendt, Alexander (1992). "Anarchy is what states make of it: the social construction of power politics," in International Organization, vol. 46, no. 2.
  39. ^ Cox, Robert (1981). "Social Forces, States and World Orders: Beyond International Relations Theory", Millennium – Journal of International Studies', Vol. 10, pp. 126–155
  40. ^ Lewkowicz, Nicolas (2010). The German Question and the International Order, 1943–48. Basingstoke and New York: Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 8–9. ISBN 978-1-349-32035-6.
  41. ^ "Dunne, Kurki & Smith: International Relations Theories 4e: Chapter 11: Revision guide". Oxford University Press Online Resource Centre. Oxford University Press. 2016. Retrieved 19 November 2020.
  42. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-03-28. Retrieved 2011-07-21.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  43. ^ Baylis, John, Steve Smith, and Patricia Owens, The Globalisation of World Politics, New York: Oxford University Press, 4th ed., pp. 187-189
  44. ^ a b c Tickner, J. Ann (December 1997). "You Just Don't Understand: Troubled Engagements Between Feminists and IR Theorists". International Studies Quarterly. 41 (4): 611–632. doi:10.1111/1468-2478.00060. hdl:1885/41080. ISSN 0020-8833.
  45. ^ a b c d e f g "Introducing Elshtain, Enloe, and Tickner: looking at key feminist efforts before journeying on", Feminist International Relations, Cambridge University Press, pp. 18–50, 2001-12-20, doi:10.1017/cbo9780511491719.002, ISBN 978-0-521-79627-9, retrieved 2021-02-04
  46. ^ Keohane, Robert O. (March 1998). "Beyond Dichotomy: Conversations Between International Relations and Feminist Theory". International Studies Quarterly. 42 (1): 193–197. doi:10.1111/0020-8833.00076. ISSN 0020-8833.
  47. ^ Marchand, Marianne (1998). "Different Communities / Different Realities / Different Encounters: A Reply to J. Ann Tickner". International Relations Quarterly. 42: 199–204 – via JSTOR.
  48. ^ For overviews, see, for example, Goldgeier, J.M., and P. E. Tetlock (2001). "Psychology and International Relations", Annual Review of Political Science, vol. 4, pp. 67-92; Janice Gross Stein (2013). "Psychological Explanations of International Decision Making and Collective Behavior", in Handbook of International Relations, edited by Walter Carlsnaes, Thomas Risse, and Beth Simmons, 2nd ed. New York: Sage, pp. 195-219.
  49. ^ Jervis, Robert (1976). Perception and Misperception in International Politics. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.
  50. ^ Larson, Deborah Welch (1994). "The Role of Belief Systems and Schemas in Foreign Policy Decision-Making". Political Psychology, 15(1), pp. 17–33; Rose McDermott (2002). "Arms Control and the First Reagan Administration: Belief-Systems and Policy Choices", Journal of Cold War Studies, 4(4), pp. 29–59.
  51. ^ Yarhi-Milo, Keren (2014). Knowing the Adversary: Leaders, Intelligence, and Assessment of Intentions in International Relations. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.
  52. ^ See, for example, Harff, Barbara and Ted Robert Gurr (1988). "Toward Empirical Theory of Genocides and Politicides: Identification and Measurement of Cases since 1945", International Studies Quarterly, 32, pp. 359–371; t'Hart, Paul, Erik K. Stern, and Bengt Sundelius (1997). "Foreign Policy Making at the Top: Political Group Dynamics", in Paul t'Hart, Erik K. Stern and Bengt Sundelius, eds., Beyond Group Think: Political Group Dynamics and Foreign Policy Making. Michigan: University of Michigan Press, pp. 3–34.
  53. ^ McDermott, Rose, "The Feeling of Rationality: The Meaning of Neuroscientific Advances for Political Science", Perspectives on Politics 2(4) (2004), pp. 691–706; Jonathan Mercer (2005). "Rationality and Psychology in International Politics", International Organization 59(1), pp. 77–106.
  54. ^ Dolan, Thomas M. (2016). "Go Big or Go Home? Positive Emotions and Responses to Wartime Success", International Studies Quarterly, 60(2), pp. 230–42; Thomas M. Dolan (2016). "Emotion and Strategic Learning in War", Foreign Policy Analysis, 12(4), pp. 571–90.
  55. ^ Markwica, Robin (2018). Emotional Choices: How the Logic of Affect Shapes Coercive Diplomacy. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  56. ^ McDermott, Rose; Davenport, Christian (2017-01-25). "Toward an Evolutionary Theory of International Relations". Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Politics. doi:10.1093/acrefore/9780190228637.013.294. ISBN 9780190228637.
  57. ^ a b Thompson, Kenneth W. (1955). "Toward a Theory of International Politics". American Political Science Review. 49 (3): 733–746. doi:10.2307/1951435. ISSN 0003-0554. JSTOR 1951435. S2CID 147041418.
  58. ^ Mearsheimer, John J.; Walt, Stephen M. (2013-09-01). "Leaving theory behind: Why simplistic hypothesis testing is bad for International Relations". European Journal of International Relations. 19 (3): 427–457. doi:10.1177/1354066113494320. ISSN 1354-0661. S2CID 52247884.
  59. ^ Aggarwal, Vinod K. (2010-09-01). "I Don't Get No Respect:1 The Travails of IPE2". International Studies Quarterly. 54 (3): 893–895. doi:10.1111/j.1468-2478.2010.00615.x. ISSN 1468-2478.
  60. ^ Keohane, Robert O. (2009-02-16). "The old IPE and the new". Review of International Political Economy. 16 (1): 34–46. doi:10.1080/09692290802524059. ISSN 0969-2290. S2CID 155053518.
  61. ^ Desch, Michael (2015-06-01). "Technique Trumps Relevance: The Professionalization of Political Science and the Marginalization of Security Studies". Perspectives on Politics. 13 (2): 377–393. doi:10.1017/S1537592714004022. ISSN 1541-0986. S2CID 147194910.
  62. ^ Isaac, Jeffrey C. (2015-06-01). "For a More Public Political Science". Perspectives on Politics. 13 (2): 269–283. doi:10.1017/S1537592715000031. ISSN 1541-0986.
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  66. ^ Jackson, Robert, and Georg Sorensen (2015). Introduction to International Relations: Theories and Approaches, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 3rd ed, p. 305.
  67. ^ Michael Haas (2017). International Relations Theory: Competing Empirical Paradigms>Lanham, MD: Lexington.

Further reading edit

  • Baylis, John; Steve Smith; and Patricia Owens. (2008) The Globalisation of World Politics, OUP, 4th edition.
  • Braumoeller, Bear. (2013) The Great Powers and the International System: Systemic Theory in Empirical Perspective. Cambridge University Press.
  • Burchill, et al. eds. (2005) Theories of International Relations, 3rd edition, Palgrave, ISBN 1-4039-4866-6
  • Chernoff, Fred. Theory and Meta-Theory in International Relations: Concepts and Contending Accounts, Palgrave Macmillan.
  • Guilhot Nicolas, ed. (2011) The Invention of International Relations Theory: Realism, the Rockefeller Foundation, and the 1954 Conference on Theory.
  • Haas, Michael (2017). International Relations Theory: Competing Empirical Paradigms, Lexington, ISBN 9781498544993
  • Hedley Bull, The Anarchical Society, Columbia University Press.
  • Jackson, Robert H., and Georg Sørensen (2013) Introduction to International Relations: Theories and Approaches, Oxford, OUP, 5th ed.
  • Van der Pijl, Kees, The Discipline of Western Supremacy: Modes of Foreign Relations and Political Economy, Volume III, Pluto Press, 2014, ISBN 9780745323183
  • Morgenthau, Hans. Politics Among Nations
  • Pettman, Ralph (2010) 'World Affairs: An Analytical Overview. World Scientific Press.
  • Waltz, Kenneth. Theory of International Politics
  • Waltz, Kenneth. Man, the State, and War, Columbia University Press.
  • Weber, Cynthia. (2004) International Relations Theory. A Critical Introduction, 2nd edition, Taylor & Francis, ISBN 0-415-34208-2
  • Wendt, Alexander. Social Theory of International Politics, Cambridge University Press.
  • Jack Snyder's 'One World, Rival Theories' in Foreign Policy
  • Stephen Walt's in Foreign Policy

External links edit

  • Theory Talks Interviews with key IR theorists

international, relations, theory, this, article, about, theoretical, discipline, international, studies, international, relations, study, international, relations, from, theoretical, perspective, seeks, explain, behaviors, outcomes, international, politics, fo. This article is about the theoretical discipline For international studies see International relations International relations theory is the study of international relations IR from a theoretical perspective It seeks to explain behaviors and outcomes in international politics The four most prominent schools of thought are realism liberalism constructivism and rational choice 1 Whereas realism and liberalism make broad and specific predictions about international relations constructivism and rational choice are methodological approaches that focus on certain types of social explanation for phenomena 2 International relations as a discipline is believed to have emerged after World War I with the establishment of a Chair of International Relations the Woodrow Wilson Chair held by Alfred Eckhard Zimmern 3 at the University of Wales Aberystwyth 4 The modern study of international relations as a theory has sometimes been traced to realist works such as E H Carr s The Twenty Years Crisis 1939 and Hans Morgenthau s Politics Among Nations 1948 5 6 The most influential IR theory work of the post World War II era was Kenneth Waltz s Theory of International Politics 1979 citation needed which pioneered neorealism Neoliberalism or liberal institutionalism became a prominent competitive framework to neorealism with prominent proponents such as Robert Keohane and Joseph Nye citation needed During the late 1980s and 1990s constructivism emerged as a prominent third IR theoretical framework in addition to existing realist and liberal approaches IR theorists such as Alexander Wendt John Ruggie Martha Finnemore and Michael N Barnett helped pioneer constructivism Rational choice approaches to world politics became increasingly influential in the 1990s in particular with works by James Fearon such as the bargaining model of war citation needed There are also post positivist reflectivist IR theories which stand in contrast to the aforementioned positivist rationalist theories such as critical theory Contents 1 Early history of the field 2 Realism 2 1 Neorealism 3 Liberalism 3 1 Neoliberalism 3 2 Complex interdependence 3 3 Post liberalism 4 Constructivism 5 Marxism 6 English School 7 Functionalism 8 Post structuralism 9 Post modernism 10 Postcolonialism 11 Feminist international relations theory 12 Psychological approaches to international relations 13 Theory in international relations scholarship 14 Alternative approaches 15 See also 16 References 17 Further reading 18 External linksEarly history of the field editEarly international relations scholarship in the interwar years focused on the need for the balance of power system to be replaced with a system of collective security These thinkers were later described as Idealists 6 The leading critique of this school of thinking was the realist analysis offered by Carr However a more recent study by David Long and Brian Schmidt in 2005 offers a revisionist account of the origins of the field of international relations They claim that the history of the field can be traced back to late 19th century imperialism and internationalism The fact that the history of the field is presented by great debates such as the realist idealist debate does not correspond with the historic evidence found in earlier works We should once and for all dispense with the outdated anachronistic artifice of the debate between the idealists and realists as the dominant framework for and understanding the history of the field Their revisionist account claims that up until 1918 international relations already existed in the form of colonial administration race science and race development 7 Realism editMain article Realism international relations Further information Classical realism international relations Neorealism international relations Offensive realism Defensive realism Liberal realism Neoclassical realism Postclassical realism Relative gains and Absolute gains nbsp Thucydides author of History of the Peloponnesian War is considered one of the earliest realist thinkers 8 Realism or political realism 9 has been the dominant theory of international relations since the conception of the discipline 10 The theory claims to rely upon an ancient tradition of thought which includes writers such as Thucydides Niccolo Machiavelli and Thomas Hobbes Early realism can be characterized as a reaction against interwar idealist thinking The outbreak of World War II was seen by realists as evidence of the deficiencies of idealist thinking There are various strands of modern day realist thinking However the main tenets of the theory have been identified as statism survival and self help Statism Realists believe that nation states are the main actors in international politics 11 As such it is a state centric theory of international relations This contrasts with liberal international relations theories which accommodate roles for non state actors and international institutions This difference is sometimes expressed by describing a realist world view as one which sees nation states as billiard balls liberals would consider relationships between states to be more of a cobweb Survival Realists believe that the international system is governed by anarchy meaning that there is no central authority 9 Therefore international politics is a struggle for power between self interested states 12 Self help Realists believe that no other states can be relied upon to help guarantee the state s survival Realism makes several key assumptions It assumes that nation states are unitary geographically based actors in an anarchic international system with no authority above capable of regulating interactions between states as no true authoritative world government exists Secondly it assumes that sovereign states rather than intergovernmental organizations non governmental organizations or multinational corporations are the primary actors in international affairs Thus states as the highest order are in competition with one another As such a state acts as a rational autonomous actor in pursuit of its own self interest with a primary goal to maintain and ensure its own security and thus its sovereignty and survival Realism holds that in pursuit of their interests states will attempt to amass resources and that relations between states are determined by their relative levels of power That level of power is in turn determined by the state s military economic and political capabilities Some realists known as human nature realists or classical realists 13 believe that states are inherently aggressive that territorial expansion is constrained only by opposing powers while others known as offensive defensive realists 13 believe that states are obsessed with the security and continuation of the state s existence The defensive view can lead to a security dilemma where increasing one s own security can bring along greater instability as the opponent s builds up its own arms making security a zero sum game where only relative gains can be made Neorealism edit Main article Neorealism international relations Further information Anarchy international relations Neorealism or structural realism 14 is a development of realism advanced by Kenneth Waltz in Theory of International Politics It is however only one strand of neorealism Joseph Grieco has combined neo realist thinking with more traditional realists This strand of theory is sometimes called modern realism 15 Waltz s neorealism contends that the effect of structure must be taken into account in explaining state behavior It shapes all foreign policy choices of states in the international arena For instance any disagreement between states derives from lack of a common power central authority to enforce rules and maintain them constantly Thus there is constant anarchy in the international system that makes it necessary for states to obtain strong weapons to guarantee their survival Additionally in an anarchic system states with greater power have a tendency to increase their influence further 16 According to neo realists structure is considered an extremely important element in IR and is defined in a twofold manner as 1 the ordering principle of the international system which is anarchy and 2 the distribution of capabilities across units Waltz also challenges traditional realism s emphasis on traditional military power instead characterizing power in terms of the combined capabilities of the state 17 Waltz s version of neorealism has frequently been characterized as Defensive Realism whereas John Mearsheimer is a proponent of a different version of neorealism characterized as Offensive Realism 18 Liberalism editMain article Liberalism international relations Further information Democratic peace theory Territorial peace theory List of wars between democracies Commercial liberalism Social liberalism Republican liberalism Institutional liberalism and Neoliberalism nbsp Kant s writings on perpetual peace were an early contribution to democratic peace theory 19 The precursor to liberal international relations theory was idealism Idealism or utopianism was viewed critically by those who saw themselves as realists for instance E H Carr 20 In international relations idealism also called Wilsonianism because of its association with Woodrow Wilson holds that a state should make its internal political philosophy the goal of its foreign policy For example an idealist might believe that ending poverty at home should be coupled with tackling poverty abroad Wilson s idealism was a precursor to liberal international relations theory which would arise amongst the institution builders after World War I citation needed Liberalism holds that state preferences rather than state capabilities are the primary determinant of state behavior Unlike realism where the state is seen as a unitary actor liberalism allows for plurality in state actions Thus preferences will vary from state to state depending on factors such as culture economic system or government type Liberalism also holds that interaction between states is not limited to the political security high politics but also economic cultural low politics whether through commercial firms organizations or individuals Thus instead of an anarchic international system there are plenty of opportunities for cooperation and broader notions of power such as cultural capital for example the influence of films leading to the popularity of the country s culture and creating a market for its exports worldwide Another assumption is that absolute gains can be made through co operation and interdependence thus peace can be achieved citation needed The democratic peace theory argues that liberal democracies have almost never made war on one another and have fewer conflicts among themselves This is seen as contradicting especially the realist theories and this empirical claim is now one of the great disputes in political science Numerous explanations have been proposed for the democratic peace It has also been argued as in the book Never at War that democracies conduct diplomacy in general very differently from non democracies Neo realists disagree with Liberals over the theory often citing structural reasons for the peace as opposed to the state s government Sebastian Rosato a critic of democratic peace theory points to America s behavior towards left leaning democracies in Latin America during the Cold War to challenge democratic peace 21 One argument is that economic interdependence makes war between trading partners less likely 22 In contrast realists claim that economic interdependence increases rather than decreases the likelihood of conflict While the democratic peace theory claims that democracy causes peace the territorial peace theory claims that the direction of causality is opposite In other words peace leads to democracy The latter theory is supported by the historical observation that peace almost always comes before democracy 23 Neoliberalism edit Main article Liberal institutionalism Neoliberalism liberal institutionalism or neo liberal institutionalism 24 is a more recent branch of liberal international relations theory Unlike traditional liberal theories of international politics which focus on individual level or domestic level explanations liberal institutionalism emphasizes the influence of systemic factors Its proponents focus on the role of international institutions in allowing nations to successfully cooperate in an anarchic international system citation needed Complex interdependence edit Robert O Keohane and Joseph S Nye in response to neorealism developed an opposing theory they dubbed complex interdependence They explain that complex interdependence sometimes comes closer to reality than does realism 25 In explaining this they cover the three baseline assumptions in realist thought first states are coherent units and are the dominant actors in international relations second force is a usable and effective instrument of policy and third there is a hierarchy in international politics The heart of Keohane and Nye s argument is that in international politics there are in fact multiple channels that connect societies exceeding the conventional Westphalian system of states This manifests itself in many forms ranging from informal governmental ties to multinational corporations and organizations Here they define their terminology interstate relations are those channels assumed by realists transgovernmental relations occur when one relaxes the realist assumption that states act coherently as units transnational applies when one removes the assumption that states are the only units It is through these channels that political exchange occurs not through the limited interstate channels that are the focus of realist theory Moreover Keohane and Nye argue that there is not in fact a hierarchy among issues meaning that not only is the martial arm of foreign policy not the supreme tool by which to carry out a state s agenda but that there are a multitude of different agendas that come to the forefront The line between domestic and foreign policy becomes blurred in this case as realistically there is no clear agenda in interstate relations Finally the use of military force is not exercised when complex interdependence prevails In other words for countries among which a complex interdependence exists the role of the military in resolving disputes is negated However Keohane and Nye go on to state that the role of the military is in fact important with respect to an alliance s political and military relations with a rival bloc 26 Post liberalism edit One version of post liberal theory argues that within the modern globalized world states in fact are driven to cooperate in order to ensure security and sovereign interests The departure from classical liberal theory is most notably felt in the re interpretation of the concepts of sovereignty and autonomy Autonomy becomes a problematic concept in shifting away from a notion of freedom self determination and agency to a heavily responsible and duty laden concept citation needed Importantly autonomy is linked to a capacity for good governance Similarly sovereignty also experiences a shift from a right to a duty In the global economy international organizations hold sovereign states to account leading to a situation where sovereignty is co produced among sovereign states The concept becomes a variable capacity of good governance and can no longer be accepted as an absolute right One possible way to interpret this theory is the idea that in order to maintain global stability and security and solve the problem of the anarchic world system in International Relations no overarching global sovereign authority is created Instead states collectively abandon some rights for full autonomy and sovereignty 27 Another version of post liberalism drawing on work in political philosophy after the end of the Cold War as well as on democratic transitions in particular in Latin America argues that social forces from below are essential in understanding the nature of the state and the international system Without understanding their contribution to political order and its progressive possibilities particularly in the area of peace in local and international frameworks the weaknesses of the state the failings of the liberal peace and challenges to global governance cannot be realised or properly understood Furthermore the impact of social forces on political and economic power structures and institutions provides some empirical evidence of the complex shifts currently underway in IR 28 Constructivism editMain article Constructivism international relations nbsp The standing of constructivism as an international relations theory increased after the fall of the Berlin wall pictured and Communism in Eastern Europe 29 as this was something not predicted by the existing mainstream theories 30 Constructivism or social constructivism 31 has been described as a challenge to the dominance of neo liberal and neo realist international relations theories 32 Michael Barnett describes constructivist international relations theories as being concerned with how ideas define international structure how this structure defines the interests and identities of states and how states and non state actors reproduce this structure 33 The key element of constructivism is the belief that International politics is shaped by persuasive ideas collective values culture and social identities Constructivism argues that international reality is socially constructed by cognitive structures which give meaning to the material world 34 Whereas rational choice approaches assume that actors follow a logic of consequences constructivist perspectives suggest that they adhere to a logic of appropriateness The theory emerged from debates concerning the scientific method of international relations theories and theories role in the production of international power 35 Emanuel Adler states that constructivism occupies a middle ground between rationalist and interpretative theories of international relations 34 Constructivist theory criticises the static assumptions of traditional international relations theory and emphasizes that international relations is a social construction And constructivism is critical of the ontological basis of rationalist theories of international relations 36 Whereas realism deals mainly with security and material power and liberalism looks primarily at economic interdependence and domestic level factors constructivism concerns itself primarily with the role of ideas in shaping the international system indeed it is possible that there is some overlap between constructivism and realism or liberalism but they remain separate schools of thought By ideas constructivists refer to the goals threats fears identities and other elements of perceived reality that influence states and non state actors within the international system Constructivists believe that these ideational factors can often have far reaching effects and that they can trump materialistic power concerns For example constructivists note that an increase in the size of the U S military is likely to be viewed with much greater concern in Cuba a traditional antagonist of the United States than in Canada a close U S ally Therefore there must be perceptions at work in shaping international outcomes As such constructivists do not see anarchy as the invariable foundation of the international system 37 but rather argue in the words of Alexander Wendt that anarchy is what states make of it 38 Constructivists also believe that social norms shape and change foreign policy over time rather than security which realists cite Marxism editMain article Marxist international relations theory See also World systems theory Neo Gramscianism Critical Theory New Marxism Dependency theory and Marxist explanations of warfare nbsp Antonio Gramsci s writings on the hegemony of capitalism have inspired Marxist international relations scholarship Marxist and Neo Marxist international relations theories are structuralist paradigms which reject the realist liberal view of state conflict or cooperation instead focusing on the economic and material aspects Marxist approaches argue the position of historical materialism and make the assumption that the economic concerns transcend others allowing for the elevation of class as the focus of study Marxists view the international system as an integrated capitalist system in pursuit of capital accumulation A sub discipline of Marxist IR is Critical Security Studies Gramscian approaches rely on the ideas of Italian Antonio Gramsci whose writings concerned the hegemony that capitalism holds as an ideology Marxist approaches have also inspired Critical Theorists such as Robert W Cox who argues that Theory is always for someone and for some purpose 39 One notable Marxist approach to international relations theory is Immanuel Wallerstein s World system theory which can be traced back to the ideas expressed by Lenin in Imperialism The Highest Stage of Capitalism World system theory argues that globalized capitalism has created a core of modern industrialized countries which exploit a periphery of exploited Third World countries These ideas were developed by the Latin American Dependency School Neo Marxist or New Marxist approaches have returned to the writings of Karl Marx for their inspiration Key New Marxists include Justin Rosenberg and Benno Teschke Marxist approaches have enjoyed a renaissance since the collapse of communism in Eastern Europe Criticisms of Marxists approaches to international relations theory include the narrow focus on material and economic aspects of life as well as assuming that the interests pursued by actors are derived from class English School editMain article English school of international relations theory The English School of international relations theory also known as International Society Liberal Realism Rationalism or the British institutionalists maintains that there is a society of states at the international level despite the condition of anarchy i e the lack of a ruler or world state Despite being called the English School many of the academics from this school were neither English nor from the United Kingdom A great deal of the work of the English School concerns the examination of traditions of past international theory casting it as Martin Wight did in his 1950s era lectures at the London School of Economics into three divisions Realist or Hobbesian after Thomas Hobbes which views states as independent competing units Rationalist or Grotian after Hugo Grotius which looks at how states can work together and cooperate for mutual benefit Revolutionist or Kantian after Immanuel Kant which looks at human society as transcending borders or national identitiesIn broad terms the English School itself has supported the rationalist or Grotian tradition seeking a middle way or via media between the power politics of realism and the utopianism of revolutionism The English School rejects behavioralist approaches to international relations theory One way to think about the English School is that while some theories identify with just one of the three historical traditions Classical Realism and Neorealism owe a debt to the Realist or Hobbesian tradition Marxism to the Revolutionist tradition for example English School looks to combine all of them While there is great diversity within the school much of it involves either examining when and how the different traditions combine or dominate or focusing on the Rationalist tradition especially the concept of International Society which is the concept most associated with English School thinking The English School maintains that the most distinguished theories of international politics can be divided into three basic categories realism which emphasises the concept of international anarchy revolutionism which concentrates on the aspect of the moral unity of the international society and rationalism which is based on the aspect of international dialogue and intercourse 40 Therefore the English School highlights the assiduous interaction between the main strands of IR theory in the understanding of interstate relations In Hedley Bull s The Anarchical Society a seminal work of the school he begins by looking at the concept of order arguing that states across time and space have come together to overcome some of the danger and uncertainty of the Hobbesian international system to create an international society of states that share certain interests and ways of thinking about the world By doing so they make the world more ordered and can eventually change international relations to become significantly more peaceful and beneficial to their shared interests Functionalism editMain article Functionalism international relations Functionalism is a theory of international relations that arose principally from the experience of European integration Rather than the self interest that realists see as a motivating factor functionalists focus on common interests shared by states Integration develops its own internal dynamic as states integrate in limited functional or technical areas they increasingly find that momentum for further rounds of integration in related areas This invisible hand of integration phenomenon is termed spillover Although integration can be resisted it becomes harder to stop integration s reach as it progresses This usage and the usage in functionalism in international relations is the less common meaning of functionalism More commonly however functionalism is an argument that explains phenomena as functions of a system rather than an actor or actors Immanuel Wallerstein employed a functionalist theory when he argued that the Westphalian international political system arose to secure and protect the developing international capitalist system His theory is called functionalist because it says that an event was a function of the preferences of a system and not the preferences of an agent Functionalism is different from structural or realist arguments in that while both look to broader structural causes realists and structuralists more broadly say that the structure gives incentives to agents while functionalists attribute causal power to the system itself bypassing agents entirely Post structuralism editPost structuralism differs from most other approaches to international politics because it does not see itself as a theory school or paradigm which produces a single account of the subject matter Instead post structuralism is an approach attitude or ethos that pursues critique in particular way Post structuralism sees critique as an inherently positive exercise that establishes the conditions of possibility for pursuing alternatives It states that Every understanding of international politics depends upon abstraction representation and interpretation Scholars associated with post structuralism in international relations include Richard K Ashley James Der Derian Michael J Shapiro R B J Walker 41 and Lene Hansen Post modernism editMain article Postmodernism international relations Post modernist approaches to international relations are critical of metanarratives and denounces traditional IR s claims to truth and neutrality 42 Postcolonialism editMain article Postcolonial international relations Postcolonial International relations scholarship posits a critical theory approach to International relations IR and is a non mainstream area of international relations scholarship Post colonialism focuses on the persistence of colonial forms of power and the continuing existence of racism in world politics 43 Feminist international relations theory editMain article Feminism in international relations Feminist international relations theory applies a gender perspective to topics and themes in international relations such as war peace security and trade In particular feminist international relations scholars use gender to analyze how power exists within different international political systems Historically feminist international relations theorists have struggled to find a place within international relations theory either having their work ignored or discredited 44 Feminist international relations also analyzes how the social and the political interact often pointing to the ways in which international relations affect individuals and vice versa Generally feminist international relations scholars tend to be critical of the realist school of thought for their strong positivist and state centered approach to international relations although feminist international scholars who are also realists exist 44 Feminist International Relations borrows from a number of methodologies and theories such as post positivism constructivism postmodernism and post colonialism Jean Bethke Elshtain is a key contributor to feminist international relations theory In her seminal book Women and War Elshtain criticizes gender roles inherent in mainstream international relations theory Particularly Elshtain decries international relations for perpetuating a tradition of armed civic culture that automatically excludes women wives 45 Instead Elshatin challenges the trope of women as solely passive peacekeepers using drawing parallels between wartime experiences and her personal experiences from her childhood and later as a mother 45 Thus Elshtain has been lauded by some feminist international relations theorists as one of the first theorists to blend personal experience with international relations thus challenging international relation s traditional preference for positivism 45 Cynthia Enloe is another influential scholar in the field of feminist international relations Her influential feminist international relations text Bananas Beaches and Bases considers where women fit into the international political system 45 Similar to Jean Bethke Elshtain Enloe looks at how the everyday lives of women are influenced by international relations 45 For example Enloe uses banana plantations to illustrate how different women are affected by international politics depending on their geographical location race or ethnicity 45 Women Enloe argues play a role in international relations whether this work is recognized or not working as labourers wives sex workers and mothers sometimes within army bases 45 J Ann Tickner is a prominent feminist international relations theorist with many notable written pieces For example her piece You Just Don t Understand Troubled Engagements Between Feminists and IR Theorists examines the misunderstandings that occur between feminist scholars and international relations theorists Specifically Tickner argues that feminist international relations theory sometimes works outside of traditional ontological and epistemological international relations structures instead analyzing international relations from a more humanistic perspective 44 Thus Tickner was critical of the ways in which the study of international relations itself excludes women from participating in international relations theorizing This piece of Tickner s was met with criticism from multiple scholars such as Robert Keohane who wrote Beyond Dichotomy Conversations Between International Relations and Feminist Theory 46 and Marianne Marchand who criticized Tickner s assumption that feminist international relations scholars worked in the same ontological reality and epistemological tradition in her piece Different Communities Different Realities Different Encounters 47 Psychological approaches to international relations editPsychological approaches to international relations focus on the impact of cognition and emotion on world politics Through the analysis of political decision making scholars have examined a broad spectrum of issues ranging from nuclear strategy and nuclear proliferation to deterrence reassurance signaling and bargaining as well as conflict management and conflict resolution 48 In the 1970s scholars of world politics started drawing on new research in cognitive psychology to explain decisions to cooperate or compete in international relations Cognitive psychology had assigned cognition a central role in the explanation of human decision making It found that people s behavior often deviates from the expectations of the traditional rational choice model To explain these deviations cognitive psychologists developed several concepts and theories These include theories of misperception the importance of beliefs and schemas in information processing and the use of analogies and heuristics in interpreting information among others Scholars of international relations took up these insights and applied them to issues in world politics For example Robert Jervis identified patterns of leaders misperception in historical cases that led to unwanted escalation failures of deterrence and the outbreak of war 49 Deborah Welch Larson and Rose McDermott have referred to belief systems and schemas as central drivers of information processing and foreign policy decision making 50 Keren Yarhi Milo has investigated how policy makers rely on cognitive shortcuts called heuristics when they assess the intentions of their adversaries 51 In addition to cognitive psychology social psychology has long inspired research in international relations Social psychologists have identified a fundamental human need for identity the way in which a person or a group is or wishes to be known by others The resulting identity formation dynamics can contribute to conflicts between and among groups Scholars of international relations have drawn on insights in social psychology to explore the dynamics of conflict among and between groups as well as processes of conflict management and resolution 52 More recently scholars of international relations have started drawing on emotion research in psychology to shed light on issues in world politics Research in psychology suggests that affect and emotions are core drivers in decision making and behavior This has significant consequences for our understanding of foreign policy escalation to war conflict resolution and numerous other issues in world politics For example Rose McDermott and Jonathan Mercer were among the first to use these new findings to argue that affective experience can have adaptive functions by facilitating quick and effective decision making 53 Thomas Dolan has drawn on affective intelligence theory to show that some emotional responses leaders may have to new events during wartime such as joy or anxiety tend to bring about change in their approaches to war while others like contentment or frustration are prone to produce resistance to change 54 Combining insights from experimental psychology and the sociology of emotions Robin Markwica has developed emotional choice theory as an alternative model to rational choice theory and constructivist perspectives 55 Evolutionary perspectives such as from evolutionary psychology have been argued to help explain many features of international relations 56 Humans in the ancestral environment did not live in states and likely rarely had interactions with groups outside of a very local area However a variety of evolved psychological mechanisms in particular those for dealing with inter group interactions are argued to influence current international relations These include evolved mechanisms for social exchange cheating and detecting cheating status conflicts leadership ingroup and outgroup distinction and biases coalitions and violence Theory in international relations scholarship editIn a 1955 article Kenneth W Thompson characterized IR theory as a recent phenomena in political science scholarship 57 Thompson distinguished between normative IR theory general IR theory and IR theory as the basis of action 57 In recent years several IR scholars have remarked on what they see as a trend away from IR theory in IR scholarship 58 59 60 61 62 The September 2013 issue of European Journal of International Relations and the June 2015 issue of Perspectives on Politics debated the state of IR theory 63 64 A 2016 study showed that while theoretical innovations and qualitative analyses are a large part of graduate training journals favor middle range theory quantitative hypothesis testing and methodology for publishing 65 Alternative approaches editFurther information Anti foundationalism Post positivism in international relations theory and Post realism This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it November 2015 Several alternative approaches have been developed based on foundationalism anti foundationalism behaviouralism structuralism and post structuralism Behavioural international relations theory is an approach to international relations theory which believes in the idea that the social sciences can adapt methodologies from the natural sciences 66 Accordingly behavioural scholars reject isms ideological approaches because their adherents believe the maxims of their isms are self evidently true Instead of testing maxims systematically to determine whether they are true behaviouralists view proponents of ideological isms as spreading propaganda in the guise of scholarship to guide policy makers The latest formulation of the behavioural approach involves macro theories or paradigms That is theories that can be applied at several levels of analysis 67 Theories previously developed in economics and sociology are applied to international affairs while the major isms such as realism are reconstituted into a form that can be tested systematically with comprehensive databases The major international relations paradigms are identified as the Marxian not ideological Marxism mass society community building and rational actor paradigms each of which are homes to alternative variants Behavioural scholars seek to retrofit isms identified above into variants of existing paradigms that can be tested empirically whereupon the future of international relations theory will move beyond untested maxims to a solid foundation of knowledge See also edit nbsp Politics portal nbsp Society portalDiplomatic history Foreign policy International legal theories List of international relations journals Philosophy of warReferences edit Snyder Jack 2004 One World Rival Theories Foreign Policy 145 November December p 52 Fearon James Wendt Alexander 2002 Rationalism v Constructivism A Skeptical View Handbook of International Relations SAGE pp 52 72 doi 10 4135 9781848608290 n3 ISBN 9780761963059 Abadia Adolfo A 2015 Del liberalismo al neo realismo Un debate en torno al realismo clasico From Liberalism to Neorealism A Discussion Around Classical Realism PDF Telos Revista de Estudios Interdisciplinarios en Ciencias Sociales in Spanish 17 3 438 459 doi 10 36390 telos173 05 ISSN 1317 0570 S2CID 147564996 SSRN 2810410 Burchill Scott and Andrew Linklater 2005 Introduction in Theories of International Relations ed by Scott Burchill et al New York Palgrave Macmillan p 6 Burchill Scott and Andrew Linklater 2005 Introduction in Theories of International Relations ed by Scott Burchill et al New York Palgrave Macmillan p 1 a b Burchill Scott and Andrew Linklater 2005 Introduction in Theories of International Relations ed by Scott Burchill et al New York Palgrave Macmillan p 7 Schmidt Brian Long David 2005 Imperialism and Internationalism in the Discipline of International Relations New York State University of New York Press ISBN 9780791463239 See Forde Steven 1995 International Realism and the Science of Politics Thucydides Machiavelli and Neorealism International Studies Quarterly 39 2 pp 141 160 a b Political Realism Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy Iep utm edu Retrieved 2017 04 04 Dunne Tim and Brian C Schmidt 2004 Realism in The Globalisation of World Politics edited by John Baylis Steve Smith and Patricia Owens New York Oxford University Press 4th ed Snyder Jack 2004 One World Rival Theories Foreign Policy Vol 145 November December p 59 Snyder Jack 2004 One World Rival Theories Foreign Policy Vol 145 November December p 55 a b Mearsheimer John 2001 The Tragedy of Great Power Politics New York W W Norton amp Company pp 25 26 ISBN 978 0 393 07624 0 Structural Realism PDF Archived from the original PDF on March 17 2009 Retrieved October 18 2009 Lamy Steven 2008 Contemporary Approaches Neo realism and Neo liberalism in The Globalisation of World Politics An Introduction to International Relations edited by John Baylis Steve Smith and Patricia Owens 4th edition New York Oxford University Press p 127 The Globalization of World Politics An Introduction to International Relations Oxford University Press 2008 ISBN 978 0 19 929777 1 Lamy Steven 2008 Contemporary Approaches Neo realism and Neo liberalism in The Globalisation of World Politics An Introduction to International Relations edited by John Baylis Steve Smith and Patricia Owens 4th edition New York Oxford University Press pp 127 128 Snyder Glenn H 2002 Mearsheimer s World Offensive Realism and the Struggle for Security A Review Essay International Security 27 1 149 173 doi 10 1162 016228802320231253 ISSN 0162 2889 JSTOR 3092155 S2CID 57569322 Gartzke Erik 1998 Kant we all just get along Opportunity willingness and the origins of the democratic peace American Journal of Political Science Vol 42 no 1 pp 1 27 Schmidt Brian C 1998 The political discourse of anarchy a disciplinary history of international relations Albany State University of new York p 219 Rosato Sebastian 2003 The Flawed Logic of Democratic Peace Theory American Political Science Review Vol 97 No 4 November pp 585 602 Copeland Dale 1996 Economic Interdependence and War A Theory of Trade Expectations International Security Vol 20 No 4 Spring pp 5 41 Hutchison Marc L Starr Daniel G 2017 The Territorial Peace Theory Evidence and Implications In Thompson William R ed Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Politics Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 acrefore 9780190228637 013 285 ISBN 978 0 19 022863 7 Sutch Peter and Juanita Elias 2006 International Relations The Basics New York Routledge p 11 Keohane Robert O Nye Joseph S 1997 Realism and Complex Interdependence In Crane George T Amawi Abla eds The Theoretical Evolution of International Political Economy A Reader Oxford Oxford University Press p 133 ISBN 978 0 19 509443 5 Keohane amp Nye 1997 p 134 Chandler David 2010 International Statebuilding The Rise of the Post Liberal Paradigm Abingdon Oxon Routledge pp 43 90 ISBN 978 0 415 42118 8 Richmond Oliver 2011 A Post Liberal Peace Abingdon Oxon Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 66784 5 Walt Stephen M 1998 Foreign Policy No 110 Special Edition Frontiers of Knowledge Spring 1998 p 41 The end of the Cold War played an important role in legitimizing constructivist t realism and liberalism failed to anticipate this event and had trouble explaining it Hay Colin 2002 Political Analysis A Critical Introduction Basingstoke Palgrave p 198 Richard Jackson November 21 2008 Ch 6 Social Constructivism Introduction to International Relations 3e PDF Oxford University Press Archived from the original PDF on 2007 04 23 Hopf Ted 1998 The Promise of Constructivism in International Relations Theory International Security Vol 23 No 1 Summer p 171 Barnett Michael 2008 Social Constructivism in The Globalisation of World Politics edited by John Baylis Steve Smith and Patricia Owens New York Oxford University Press 4th ed p 162 a b Adler Emmanuel Seizing the middle ground European Journal of International Relations Vol 3 1997 p 319 Fierke K M 2016 Constructivism in International Relations Theories Discipline and Diversity edited by Tim Dunne Milja Kurki and Steve Smith Oxford Oxford University Press p 167 In international relations ontology refers to the basic unit of analysis that an international relations theory uses For example for neorealists humans are the basic unit of analysis The IR Theory Knowledge Base Irtheory com 2015 04 03 Retrieved 2017 04 04 Wendt Alexander 1992 Anarchy is what states make of it the social construction of power politics in International Organization vol 46 no 2 Cox Robert 1981 Social Forces States and World Orders Beyond International Relations Theory Millennium Journal of International Studies Vol 10 pp 126 155 Lewkowicz Nicolas 2010 The German Question and the International Order 1943 48 Basingstoke and New York Palgrave Macmillan pp 8 9 ISBN 978 1 349 32035 6 Dunne Kurki amp Smith International Relations Theories 4e Chapter 11 Revision guide Oxford University Press Online Resource Centre Oxford University Press 2016 Retrieved 19 November 2020 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2012 03 28 Retrieved 2011 07 21 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Baylis John Steve Smith and Patricia Owens The Globalisation of World Politics New York Oxford University Press 4th ed pp 187 189 a b c Tickner J Ann December 1997 You Just Don t Understand Troubled Engagements Between Feminists and IR Theorists International Studies Quarterly 41 4 611 632 doi 10 1111 1468 2478 00060 hdl 1885 41080 ISSN 0020 8833 a b c d e f g Introducing Elshtain Enloe and Tickner looking at key feminist efforts before journeying on Feminist International Relations Cambridge University Press pp 18 50 2001 12 20 doi 10 1017 cbo9780511491719 002 ISBN 978 0 521 79627 9 retrieved 2021 02 04 Keohane Robert O March 1998 Beyond Dichotomy Conversations Between International Relations and Feminist Theory International Studies Quarterly 42 1 193 197 doi 10 1111 0020 8833 00076 ISSN 0020 8833 Marchand Marianne 1998 Different Communities Different Realities Different Encounters A Reply to J Ann Tickner International Relations Quarterly 42 199 204 via JSTOR For overviews see for example Goldgeier J M and P E Tetlock 2001 Psychology and International Relations Annual Review of Political Science vol 4 pp 67 92 Janice Gross Stein 2013 Psychological Explanations of International Decision Making and Collective Behavior in Handbook of International Relations edited by Walter Carlsnaes Thomas Risse and Beth Simmons 2nd ed New York Sage pp 195 219 Jervis Robert 1976 Perception and Misperception in International Politics Princeton NJ Princeton University Press Larson Deborah Welch 1994 The Role of Belief Systems and Schemas in Foreign Policy Decision Making Political Psychology 15 1 pp 17 33 Rose McDermott 2002 Arms Control and the First Reagan Administration Belief Systems and Policy Choices Journal of Cold War Studies 4 4 pp 29 59 Yarhi Milo Keren 2014 Knowing the Adversary Leaders Intelligence and Assessment of Intentions in International Relations Princeton NJ Princeton University Press See for example Harff Barbara and Ted Robert Gurr 1988 Toward Empirical Theory of Genocides and Politicides Identification and Measurement of Cases since 1945 International Studies Quarterly 32 pp 359 371 t Hart Paul Erik K Stern and Bengt Sundelius 1997 Foreign Policy Making at the Top Political Group Dynamics in Paul t Hart Erik K Stern and Bengt Sundelius eds Beyond Group Think Political Group Dynamics and Foreign Policy Making Michigan University of Michigan Press pp 3 34 McDermott Rose The Feeling of Rationality The Meaning of Neuroscientific Advances for Political Science Perspectives on Politics 2 4 2004 pp 691 706 Jonathan Mercer 2005 Rationality and Psychology in International Politics International Organization 59 1 pp 77 106 Dolan Thomas M 2016 Go Big or Go Home Positive Emotions and Responses to Wartime Success International Studies Quarterly 60 2 pp 230 42 Thomas M Dolan 2016 Emotion and Strategic Learning in War Foreign Policy Analysis 12 4 pp 571 90 Markwica Robin 2018 Emotional Choices How the Logic of Affect Shapes Coercive Diplomacy Oxford Oxford University Press McDermott Rose Davenport Christian 2017 01 25 Toward an Evolutionary Theory of International Relations Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Politics doi 10 1093 acrefore 9780190228637 013 294 ISBN 9780190228637 a b Thompson Kenneth W 1955 Toward a Theory of International Politics American Political Science Review 49 3 733 746 doi 10 2307 1951435 ISSN 0003 0554 JSTOR 1951435 S2CID 147041418 Mearsheimer John J Walt Stephen M 2013 09 01 Leaving theory behind Why simplistic hypothesis testing is bad for International Relations European Journal of International Relations 19 3 427 457 doi 10 1177 1354066113494320 ISSN 1354 0661 S2CID 52247884 Aggarwal Vinod K 2010 09 01 I Don t Get No Respect 1 The Travails of IPE2 International Studies Quarterly 54 3 893 895 doi 10 1111 j 1468 2478 2010 00615 x ISSN 1468 2478 Keohane Robert O 2009 02 16 The old IPE and the new Review of International Political Economy 16 1 34 46 doi 10 1080 09692290802524059 ISSN 0969 2290 S2CID 155053518 Desch Michael 2015 06 01 Technique Trumps Relevance The Professionalization of Political Science and the Marginalization of Security Studies Perspectives on Politics 13 2 377 393 doi 10 1017 S1537592714004022 ISSN 1541 0986 S2CID 147194910 Isaac Jeffrey C 2015 06 01 For a More Public Political Science Perspectives on Politics 13 2 269 283 doi 10 1017 S1537592715000031 ISSN 1541 0986 Table of Contents September 2013 19 3 Sage Journals Retrieved 2016 02 17 Perspectives on Politics Vol 13 Issue 02 journals cambridge org Retrieved 2016 02 17 Colgan Jeff D 2016 02 12 Where Is International Relations Going Evidence from Graduate Training International Studies Quarterly 60 3 486 498 doi 10 1093 isq sqv017 ISSN 0020 8833 Jackson Robert and Georg Sorensen 2015 Introduction to International Relations Theories and Approaches Oxford Oxford University Press 3rd ed p 305 Michael Haas 2017 International Relations Theory Competing Empirical Paradigms gt Lanham MD Lexington Further reading editBaylis John Steve Smith and Patricia Owens 2008 The Globalisation of World Politics OUP 4th edition Braumoeller Bear 2013 The Great Powers and the International System Systemic Theory in Empirical Perspective Cambridge University Press Burchill et al eds 2005 Theories of International Relations 3rd edition Palgrave ISBN 1 4039 4866 6 Chernoff Fred Theory and Meta Theory in International Relations Concepts and Contending Accounts Palgrave Macmillan Guilhot Nicolas ed 2011 The Invention of International Relations Theory Realism the Rockefeller Foundation and the 1954 Conference on Theory Haas Michael 2017 International Relations Theory Competing Empirical Paradigms Lexington ISBN 9781498544993 Hedley Bull The Anarchical Society Columbia University Press Jackson Robert H and Georg Sorensen 2013 Introduction to International Relations Theories and Approaches Oxford OUP 5th ed Van der Pijl Kees The Discipline of Western Supremacy Modes of Foreign Relations and Political Economy Volume III Pluto Press 2014 ISBN 9780745323183 Morgenthau Hans Politics Among Nations Pettman Ralph 2010 World Affairs An Analytical Overview World Scientific Press Waltz Kenneth Theory of International Politics Waltz Kenneth Man the State and War Columbia University Press Weber Cynthia 2004 International Relations Theory A Critical Introduction 2nd edition Taylor amp Francis ISBN 0 415 34208 2 Wendt Alexander Social Theory of International Politics Cambridge University Press Jack Snyder s One World Rival Theories in Foreign Policy Stephen Walt s One World Many Theories in Foreign PolicyExternal links editTheory Talks Interviews with key IR theorists Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title International relations theory amp oldid 1182586627, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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