INR 2001 Lecture Notes - Lecture 29: Standpoint Feminism, Liberal Feminism, Consequentialism
Document Summary
Interactions across state boundaries that involve at least one actor that is not the agent of a government or intergovernmental organization. Embodies the norms, principles, rules, and institutions around which global expectations unite regarding a specific international problem. An approach to evaluating moral choices on the basis of the results of the action taken. A variant of constructivism that emphasizes the role of social discourse in the development if ideas and identities. A variant of constructivism that sees ideas and identities as influenced in part by independent actors. Generalized standards of behavior that, once accepted, shape collective expectations about appropriate conduct. Post-structural feminism = implications of gendered language. A theory hypothesizing that less developed countries are exploited because global capitalism makes them dependent on rich countries that create exploitative results for trade and production. A concept referring to the growing need for national policy makers to make decisions that will meet both domestic and foreign goals.