Week 1 Flashcards

1
Q

Realism

A

States are main actors
states relate to each other under the condition of anarchy
states are motivated by power
states are in competition with each other

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2
Q

classical realism

A

human nature is translated to international political action
constant state of insecurity
maximization of power to prevent conflict
morality is not entirely absent

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3
Q

structural realism

A

states seek to maximize power
states are motivated by power - exogenous and unchanging interest, determined by strucutre of anarchy
states are unitary, rational actors
Offensive and defensive
Kenneth waltz

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4
Q

liberalism

A

international cooperation is possible
motivated by ideals
states as primary actors but also secondary actors
foreign policy is determined by domestic politics
Immanuel kant; perpeutal peace

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5
Q

structural liberalism

A

‘economic version’ of liberalism
absolute gains rather than relative gains
reducing transaction costs; international cooperation
structure remains anarchical but states work together to reduce dangers of anarchy
Robert keohane

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6
Q

constructivism

A

Importance of intersubjective ideational structures (norms)
mutual constitution of agents and structures
influence of identity on state’s interest
anarchy does not force states into a particular course of action
Martha finnemore

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7
Q

Offensive realism

A

More power = more security
more power = hegemony
hegemons are unlikely to be attacked
competitive, offensive and expansionist policies
maximize power
John Mearsheimer

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8
Q

Deffensive realism

A

more stability = more security
presevering the balance of power
unlimited maximization of power; enter security dilemma
practive restraint
maximize security

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9
Q

Balance of power

A

When states maximize power, other states seek to match it

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10
Q

band wagoning

A

forming alliances to counterbalance a hegemon

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11
Q

Balance of power during Syrian Civil War

A

There was multipolarity in the region
Allows states to intervene because the risk of an immediate response is smaller
Allows states to pick and choose allies
Complicated proxy war and reduced the credibility of the Syrian united opposition
Prompted the US to practice restraint as not to ‘force’ a closer alliance between Russia and Iran

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12
Q

Anti-Assad

A

Saudi Arabia
Turkey
USA
Europe
Free Syria Army
Syrian democratice forces
Islamic State
Syrian national coalition

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13
Q

Pro-Assad

A

Iran
Hezbollah
Russia

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14
Q

International relations

A

1906
International organisation
Political science
e.g. Thucydiden, Machiavelli

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15
Q

Strategic studies

A

after WWII
Stability nuclear war
State security
e.g. oppenheimer, vietnam war, clausewitz

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16
Q

Security studies

A

Human security
Decline interstate warfare
e.g. Rwanda genocide, cybersecurity, economic security

17
Q

International + regional level

A

regional and international (power) raltions constantly change
parties have many (contradicting) interests
are not unitied themselves
Power relations exist on vairous levels
are fought by various proxies
The lens use to analyze these relations is not singular