Lecture #2: Conceptualizing International Relations Flashcards

1
Q

What is the Peloponnesian War?

A
  • war between Athens and Sparta
  • Sparta won
  • United several Greek city-states under Athens
  • marked the end of the Golden Age of Greece (478 BC)
  • small states like Corinth and Cocyra to get bigger allies like Athens and Sparta involved in their wars
  • liberate the states under Athenian
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2
Q

What is the legacy of the Peloponnesian War?

A
  • human beings are never fully satisfied with the status quo, states are inevitably seeking to maximize their interests
  • increase in power of rival state must be challenged because an imbalance will encourage aggression (“Power Transition”)
  • ex: sounds like the beginning of WWI
  • power shift from Athens to Sparta
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3
Q

What are the 3 approaches to politics?

A
  • normative (moral priority of justice)
  • institutional (development of law & IO)
  • interpersonal/inter group (centrality of struggle for power)
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4
Q

What is normative politics?

A
  • politics defined in moral terms
  • quest for justice
  • quest for “good life” (public good) achieved when community life is “just”
  • “life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness”
  • fundamental aim of politics is establishment of community justice (Plato, Socrates is Plato’s teacher)
  • democracy prohibits tyranny bc ppl have freedom of choice
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5
Q

What is the difference between Classical Thinkers and Medieval Thinkers?

A
  • Socrates > Plato > Aristotle (classical)
  • Thomas Aquinas & Dante Alighieri (Italian Christian thinkers)
  • medieval thinkers/Middle Ages added religious purpose of quest for peace and justice
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6
Q

What is the League of Nations?

A
  • creative idea from Woodrow Wilson
  • formed after WWI at the Paris Peace Conference in 1920 (Geneva, Switzerland)
  • ultimately failed at world peace because WWII happened
  • US did not join (isolationist policy to not get involved in war at all)
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7
Q

What is the legacy of Woodrow Wilson’s 14 Points speech?

A
  • main idea: concept of national right to “self-determination”
  • he was vague
  • many groups took it to mean an identified grouping of people should have the liberty to create their own gov’t
  • led to new nation states and independence inspirations
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8
Q

Who is E.H. Carr?

A

British diplomat historian who warned of the danger in using moral language to clothe national interest
- ex: Japan’s “Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere”
- ex: free trade as justification for imperialism

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9
Q

Who is Joseph Rudyard Kipling?

A
  • wrote The Jungle Book and The White Man’s Burden
  • white man’s burden was poem about Philippine-American war
  • moral of white race to civilize non-white peoples
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10
Q

What is institutional politics?

A
  • main authority is given to gov’t institution
  • gov’t reserves right to enforce laws and use force
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11
Q

Who is Max Weber?

A
  • 19th century German sociologist
  • defined politics as the authoritative decision-making actions of the state
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12
Q

Who is David Easton?

A
  • 20th century American political scientist from University of Chicago
  • systems theory: defined politics as process of making authoritative decisions for an entire society
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13
Q

What is interpersonal politics?

A
  • “Power politics”
  • politics is a quest for influence and power
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14
Q

Who is Robert Dahl?

A
  • 20th century American political scientist (Yale)
  • politics is human relationships involving control, influence, power, and authority
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15
Q

Who is Hans Morgenthau?

A
  • German-American political scientist
  • realist
  • all politics (domestic or international) involve a struggle for power
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16
Q

What is a paradigm?

A

Framework for theoretical analysis (essential basis for theory)

17
Q

Who is Samuel Huntington?

A
  • “Clash of Civilizations” author (Foreign Affaird, 1993)
  • thesis: future wars not likely between countries but between cultures
  • cultural and religious identities will be primary source of conflict
  • global interdependence heighten cultural and religious identities
  • rising economic regionalism (EU, NAFTA, etc)
18
Q

Who is Francis Fukuyama?

A
  • author of “End of History”
  • the world reached the ‘end of history’ in a Hegelian dialectical sense
  • end-point if mankind is the universalization of Western liberal democracy as the final form of gov’t
  • human rights, liberal democracy, capitalist free market economy only remaining ideological alternative post-Cold War
19
Q

What is the Hegelian Dialectic?

A
  • created by Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel (German philosopher) and Immanuel Kant
  • clash of opposing ideas leads to creation of new idea
  • humanity working toward an end point
  • spiritualism!
  • unfolding of God’s ideas - struggle between divinely inspired ideas -> change in earthly political and social environment
20
Q

What is the Marxist dialectic?

A
  • Karl Marx (German)
  • basis of Communism (and a utopia coming out of capitalism)
  • materialism replaces Hegel’s spiritualism
  • proletarian rule and development of a democratic communistic utopia
21
Q

What are the 3 ways to analyze world politics?

A
  • traditionalism (WWII~1960s, history law and organizations role of power)
  • behavioralism (1960s-70s, scientific methodology to world politics, quantitative)
  • post-behavioralism (70s to now, combination of the above two)
22
Q

What is realism?

A
  • approach to understanding world politics with the pessimistic understanding of human nature (allows to expect wars, etc.)
  • Aristotle, “man is by nature a political animal”
  • survival of the fittest
23
Q

What is neorealism/structural realism?

A

Same emphasis on state actors, National power, national security but less emphasis on morality

24
Q

What is liberalism/idealism?

A
  • optimistic view of human nature
  • politics based on power and authority contrary to common goal
  • priority of law and institutions
  • priority of moral purpose
25
Q

What are some examples of neoliberalism/neoliberal institutionalism?

A
  • UN
  • NATO
  • EU
  • all can increase aid and cooperation between states
26
Q

Who are some famous liberals?

A
  • John Locke (called Father of Liberalism)
  • Woodrow Wilson (League of Nations)
  • Immanuel Kant (On Perpetual Peace)
27
Q

What is interdependence?

A
  • growing influence of non-state actors
  • declining role of force in world politics (rise of non-security issues like environment, human rights, natural disasters, finance, resources)