introduction to ir theory

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Introduction to IR Theory MDAW 2013: DCH & MBK

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MDAW 2013: DCH & MBK. Introduction to IR Theory. Major Schools of IR Theory. Realism Idealism  Liberalism Marxism Critical Theory(s). Realism. Posits that states are motivated by a desire for military and economic power / security Assumes that the following things are true: - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Introduction to IR Theory

Introduction to IR Theory

MDAW 2013: DCH & MBK

Page 2: Introduction to IR Theory

Major Schools of IR Theory Realism Idealism Liberalism Marxism Critical Theory(s)

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Page 4: Introduction to IR Theory

Realism Posits that states are motivated by a desire for

military and economic power / security Assumes that the following things are true:

The international system is anarchic Sovereign states are the dominant actors in the

international system States are rational, unitary actors that maximize

their own interests The overriding interest of each state is its

security/survival States pursue security by amassing resources Relations between states are governed by their

relative power

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Realism, cont’d

Defensive Realism Offensive Realism

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Liberalism

Idealism (Wilsonianism)—a state should make its internal political philosophy the goal of its foreign policy Is an important precursor of liberalism Has been embraced by left- and right-

wing perspectives Liberalism: state preferences, rather

than state capabilities, are the primary determinant of state behavior

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Liberalism, cont’d

Liberalist theories assume… States are not unitary actors Preferences vary from state to state,

depending on culture, economic system, government type, etc.

Interactions between states are determined by culture, economic exchange, etc—not just “diplomacy” and “high politics”

The international system has an underlying order

Cooperation can generate absolute gains

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Marxism

Rejects the focus on states and instead explains global politics based on the economic/material aspects of the international system and how that system is connected to class structures at the local, state, and trans-state levels

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Marxism, cont’d Assumes that economics trumps all other

concerns—class is the focus of explanation Posits that the international system is an

integrated order designed to protect/facilitate capital accumulation

Strongly informed dependency theory— Wealthy countries maximize their power by

penetrating Southern countries with political advisors, experts, MNCs, etc.

Designed to appropriate natural resources and foster dependency of the South on the North

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Critical Theories Schools of thought that criticize traditional

conceptions of international politics Often share a “constructivist” orientation—

assume that ideas/language/ideology shape international politics

Feminisms Post-colonialisms Queer IR Post- and anti-modern political theory as

applied to IR (Foucault, Heidegger, Nietzsche, etc.)

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