INGS1002 Study Guide - Final Guide: Stephen D. Krasner, Kenneth Waltz, Cui Bono

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Lesson 1 - 31/07 How do we think about global
divisions?
Capitalism - page 51:
Marxian Economics
1. What makes up the world?
o What are the underlying assumptions that make up the social and
international world?
ONTOLOGY - what do we think the world is made up of? What is the
furniture that makes up the world of international relations?
o What things are made up of?
o The politics of ontology looks at what your perspective is, e.g state-centric
as a realist would argue, gender as a feminist would argue, classes as a
marxist would argue
o Do we states? Do we see classes? Do we see institutions?
o It all depends on what your perspective is
EPISTEMOLOGY - the way of knowing the world
o Developing a theory of knowledge: how do we know about the social and
international world? Is this a correspondence theory of reality that
realism adheres to?
o ' Unknown knowns'
o Ways of knowing about the social and international world
The Four Dominant Theories of IR
Realism - (Neo) Realism: Adheres to the notion that states are dominant
on the international stage and that those states exist within a wall where
life is nasty, brutish and short and therefore conflict defines the
international
Liberal Institutionalist: Liberalism does accept the dominance of states
but suggests that it is more sophisticated then that. That is, that the
international is linked to the wider actions of state-actors and
international institutions that bring about not just conflict but also
cooperation.
Marxism: * Marxism did not die with the collapse of the berlin wall in
1989* The critique of political economy that marxism delivers is not
about revolution, it is about the critique of the political economy today.
(This is why we do David Harvey's readings because he is a neo-marxist)
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Constructivism: The argument is that if we raise different ideas about
the social world/ about world politics that world can be constructed
otherwise. Emphasis on discourse.
" As we know, there are known knowns; there are things we know we know. We
also know there are known unknowns; that is to say we know there are some things
we do not know. But there also unknown unknowns - the ones we don't know we
don't know. And if one looks throughout the history of our country and other free
country, it is the latter category that tend to be the difficult ones"
- Donald Rumsfeld (2002)
Perspectives:
Robert Cox, 'Social Forces, States and World Order',
Millennium: Journal of International Studies (1981) Voluntary Reading
^Famous distinction between problem-solving vs critical theory.
Problem solving: Causal relationships and regular patterns maintaining social
order
Critical Theory: Reveal underlying normative dimension of theory and assess
change.
How do existing orders come into being, how do norms emerge, what forces may
lead to change?
Robert Cox: 'Theory is always for someone and for some purpose' This
underlying embeddedness of politics within the theoretical assumptions
that construct the discipline assumptions of international relations and
therefore also the theoretical assumptions that underpin your own
preferences. These are articulated because they work towards some
purpose of your own.
He does this to show that the world is much more complex than what neo-
realism assumes; based on the principle of parsimony. Cox rejects that and
suggests it is oversimplified.
' Cui Bono?' - Who Benefits? If we reveal the power relations that underpin (for
example) neo-realism, who benefits? As Cox argues, it is predominantly America
that benefits.
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Realise your own politics.
Lesson 2 - 07/07 The Birth of the Modern State: The Myth of 1648
Lecture structure:
1.Neo-realism and state-centrism
2. Liberalism and 'the international'
3. Historical materialism: The myth of 1648
4. Revolution as the "sixth great power"?
5. Uneven and combined development
6. Globalisation as uneven and combined development
Neo-realism and state-centrism
o Kenneth Waltz, Theory of International Politics (1979)
Sets out to theorise "the international"
Systematic explanation of international relations
A system compromises of 1) structure + 2) interacting units
For Kenneth, the theory of the international that he wants to deliver as
systemic is entirely made up of those two components.
The system of "the international" = international anarchy + states
( It is nothing to do with anarchy as a political ideology, he has a very
specific understanding of what he means as anarchy. There is no world
governance, is what he means) States compete on the international
stage for hierarchy, for influence etc and since there is no
overlapping governance states exist in a state of anarchism.
The international is made up of a set of "0 sum gains" - one state wins and
another state loses
International anarchy is a self-help system with no central authority
The war of all-against-all: geopolitical struggle
o The structure of "the international"
1. The ordering principles are arranged by anarchy in the international
system (hierarchy domestically);
2. The units (states) are functionally undifferentiated; and
3. The distribution of capabilities of units (states) change leading to
different systems
( States have fundamentally the same role, so Australia, Chad, Russia etc
all perform the same roles functionally. The only difference is their
material capability)
The international states-system came into effect following the Peace of
Westphalia (1648)
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