Global quick notes II Flashcards
(91 cards)
3
Realist thinker - Morgenthau
- Key idea: “State egoism” – states act in their own national interest.
- View of human nature: Selfish, power-seeking.
- Impact: Underpins realist scepticism of cooperation in IR.
4
Realist thinker - Hobbes
- State of nature: “Nasty, brutish and short” – war of all against all, and ‘every man is the enemy of every man’
- Solution: Strong, central authority to maintain order.
- Impact: Justifies need for state sovereignty and power politics.
- 1651, Leviathan
2
Liberal thinker - Keohane
- Theory: Complex interdependence – globalisation links states, reduces conflict.
- View: Cooperation is rational in a globalised world.
Realist thinker - Machiavelli
- View of humans: “Insatiable, arrogant, crafty and shifting.”
- Relevance: Foundation for realist distrust in international cooperation.
4
Realist thinker - Waltz
- Neo-realist
Type: Defensive realist - Theory: Balance of Power; Bipolarity (e.g., Cold War) ensures stability.
- Anarchy: System lacks a central authority – constant security dilemma.
- Quote: “Interdependence promotes war as well as peace.”
Realist thinker - Mearshemier
- Type: Offensive realist
- Theory: States aim for hegemony; conflict is inevitable due to competition.
- Hegemonic Stability Theory: Dominance by a single power maintains order.
3
Liberal thinker - Nye
- Soft power: Influence through culture, values, diplomacy.
- Smart power: Blend of hard and soft power.
- Critique of hard power: Especially US reliance in the 2000s.
3
Liberal thinker - Fukuyama
- Claim: Liberal democracy is the final stage of ideological evolution.
- Support: Democratic Peace Theory – democracies don’t go to war with each other.
- Concept: Republican liberalism → expansion of “zones of peace.”
3
Other liberal thinkers
- Richard Cobden
Idea: “Eternal bonds of peace” through free trade and commercial interdependence.
- Woodrow Wilson
Ideal: International rule of law and collective security (e.g., UN).
Quote: Turn the “jungle” of IR into a “zoo.”
- Ohmae
Concepts:
Hollow state: States no longer central economic actors.
Globalisation: Undermines state sovereignty – non-state actors gain power.
3
SOVEREIGNTY
- Peace of Westphalia (1648):
Principle: States are sovereign – non-intervention in internal affairs.
- Montevideo Convention (1933):
Defines a state by:
Permanent population
Defined territory
Government
Capacity for foreign relations
- UK Context:
A.V. Dicey: Popular vs legislative sovereignty.
Brexit: Reclaim of sovereignty from the EU.
Devolved Assemblies: e.g., Scottish Parliament = de facto internal sovereignty.
3
Challenges to sovereignty
- Globalisation
- Supranational Bodies: WTO, ICC, IMF, EU
- Examples:
France forced to accept British beef (2002)
Apple fined over Irish tax deal (2016)
US steel tariffs dropped after WTO ruling (2003)
2
Hyperglobalists (Liberals):
- Claims:
Borderless world, rise of non-state actors (TNCs, NGOs, global civil society).
Global governance > national sovereignty.
Interdependence = less conflict, more cooperation.
- Economic impacts:
TNCs like Apple: If a country, would be 55th richest.
NICs (China, India, Brazil, etc.): Used globalisation for development.
Strategies: Import substitution & export-oriented growth.
Impact: Increased GDP per capita.-
3
Globalisation Sceptics (Realists):
- Claim: Sovereignty persists – IOs created by states for states.
- Global governance: A tool of state interests.
- Kenneth Waltz: Interdependence can increase conflict.
4
INEQUALITY & GLOBALISATION
- Core/Periphery Model (World Systems Theory):
Core (North): HQ of TNCs, high-tech production
Periphery (South): Raw materials, agriculture
Semi-periphery (East): Manufacturing hubs (e.g., China, India)
- Trade Inequality:
Criticism: Free trade favours rich states.
Evidence: Agricultural protectionism by US/EU, WTO pressure on the South.
- Rural Poverty:
¾ of people living on <$1/day in rural areas.
Global demand disrupts subsistence farming.
- Institutions Undermining Sovereignty:
IMF/WB SAPs: Force policy changes for aid.
WTO tribunals: Enforce trade rulings (e.g., US 2003 tariff case).
4
CONCLUSION for realists and liberals
- Realists emphasize anarchy, state-centric power, and sovereignty.
- Liberals argue for interdependence, cooperation, and diminishing state control.
- Globalisation is both a force of integration and a source of inequality/conflict.
- Sovereignty is increasingly conditional, shared, and challenged—especially economically and culturally.
4
Erosion of State Sovereignty
- Economic Power of MNCs: Multinationals often have greater resources than many states, and can pressure governments to lower taxes and labour protections (e.g. Vauxhall in 2007).
- Capital Mobility: Events like Black Wednesday (1992) show how markets can undermine national economic policies, demonstrating the shift of power from states to markets.
- Cyber and Communications Globalisation: States struggle to control information—e.g. Germany’s laws on Holocaust denial are bypassed via foreign-hosted websites; jihadist propaganda has used the internet effectively (e.g. 7/7 bombers, ISIS on Twitter).
- Global Crime and Disease: Transnational challenges (terrorism, trafficking, pandemics) highlight the limitations of national borders in a globalised world.
4
Persistence of State Power
- Military Sovereignty: States like Russia (Georgia 2008, Ukraine 2022) and Syria retain military dominance and act in their self-interest.
- Domestic Autonomy: Countries retain control over laws, taxation, human rights, and borders (e.g. UK migration policy).
- Technological Censorship: Authoritarian states like China and Iran actively restrict global information flows, asserting sovereignty online.
- Global Crisis Management: States lead responses to global financial crises and climate change through IGOs like the IMF or UN.
4
Cultural Globalisation and Homogenisation
- Americanisation: The dominance of US products, language (English), and celebrities has led to fears of cultural imperialism (‘McDonaldisation’, ‘Starbucks culture’).
- Liberal Ideological Spread: The rise of individualism, democracy, and human rights is linked to the global reach of US-backed institutions.
- Reverse Cultural Flow: Globalisation also spreads non-Western culture to the West—through food, medicine, religion—leading to hybridisation or ‘glocalisation’ (e.g. Bollywood, Al-Jazeera).
- Cultural Resistance: Anti-globalisation protests (e.g. against McDonald’s) and Huntington’s “clash of civilisations” thesis reflect polarisation rather than homogenisation.
2
Role of International Organisations
- Conflict Mitigation: UN and IGOs have fostered peace agreements and collective responses to climate and nuclear issues (e.g. Iran Deal, Paris Accord).
- Global Governance Limitations: States often prioritise sovereignty over global cooperation (e.g. US rejection of the Kyoto Protocol).
4
Debate: Hard Power vs Soft Power
- Soft Power: Joseph Nye’s concept highlights attraction through culture, diplomacy, and values (e.g. Obama’s approach post-Bush era).
- Hard Power: Realists emphasize military/economic coercion (e.g. NATO in Kosovo, sanctions on Iran).
- Smart Power: Hillary Clinton’s synthesis of soft and hard power is advocated as a balanced strategy.
- Realist View: An anarchic world necessitates military preparedness (e.g. NATO protection of Baltic states).
2
Democratic Peace Theory vs Realism
- Liberal View: Democracies don’t go to war with each other; EU seen as a peace zone.
- Realist Response: States act in self-interest regardless of system type (e.g. Trump’s foreign policy, Iraq War, Putin’s actions in Ukraine).
2
Global Governance & State Cooperation
- Multilateralism vs Sovereignty:
Brexit (UK, 2016–2020): Departure from the EU shows states can reclaim sovereignty.
Kyoto Treaty: US refusal (2001) shows limits of global environmental cooperation.
- State-led Crisis Response:
Asian Financial Crisis (1997–98): IMF bailouts led by state-backed institutions.
Globalisation conclusion
Globalisation both challenges and reinforces state power. While transnational forces—economic, cultural, technological—undermine aspects of sovereignty, states adapt, resist, and remain central actors in the international system. The balance between soft and hard power, the tension between liberalism and realism, and the cultural interplay of global homogenisation vs local resilience are crucial to understanding the 21st-century world order.
3
Global Communication vs State Control
- Undesirable Content Access:
Germany: Holocaust denial material illegal domestically but accessible via US-hosted websites.
Islamist Propaganda: Groups like ISIS use platforms (e.g. Twitter, YouTube) to radicalise individuals globally.
- Arab Spring (2011):
Tunisia: Protest videos shared online undermined state control over information, aiding coordination.
‘5 Star Jihad’ Accounts: Glorify jihadism using luxury imagery to attract youth (sports cars, wealth, etc.).
- State Response:
China: Uses the “Great Firewall” to block foreign internet content.
Iran: Bans satellite dishes, censors internet to curb “immoral” Western influence.