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Chapter 3: Classical Realism By Richard Ned Lebow

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Title: Chapter 3: Classical Realism By Richard Ned Lebow


1
Chapter 3 Classical RealismBy Richard Ned Lebow
International Relations Theories Discipline and
Diversity
2
Learning objectives
  • After this lecture you should be able to
  • Appreciate the key principles and themes of
    classical realism
  • Understand the main differences between
    classical realism and neorealism
  • Apply classical realist themes to
    contemporary world politics

3
Problems of neorealism
  • Classical realism considers neorealism a parody
    of science it is overly parsimonious,
    unfalsifiable and does not adequately theorise
    key concepts such as polarity and power
  • The decline of neorealism since the end of the
    Cold War has resulted in renewed interest in
    classical realist thinkers.

4
Key classical realists
  • Key classical realists include
  • Thucydides, Machiavelli, Von Clausewitz,
    Morgenthau
  • They have been interested in questions of order,
    justice and change across 2500 years
  • They tend to
  • advocate holistic understanding of politics
  • recognise the close relationship of domestic and
    international
  • acknowledge the role of ethics and community
  • regard history as cyclical

5
Domestic and international
  • Classical realists do not make a strong
    distinction between domestic politics and the
    anarchical realm of world politics
  • They see the cohesiveness of community and shared
    norms as central in maintenance of order and
    restraint in international relations as in
    domestic politics

6
Balance of power
  • Classical realists appreciate the importance of
    balance of power in international relations.
    However, they do not see it as an effective
    deterrent of war but rather as a potential cause
    of conflict
  • Order ultimately rests on strength of community
    for classical realists.
  • For example, for Morgenthau it was norms of
    international society rather than the
    distribution of capabilities that maintained the
    effectiveness of balance of power in Europe
    during the 18th and 19th centuries

7
Interests and justice
  • Neorealists emphasise interests as the priority
    of state goals. Classical realists emphasise
    justice as the foundation of community and order
  • For classical realists justice is important for
    two reasons
  • 1) Because it is the key to influence
  • 2) Because it provides the basis on which actors
    construct their interests

8
Change and modernisation
  • For classical realists, change is associated with
    modernisation, which brings about shifts in
    identities and discourses, and hence conceptions
    of security
  • In restoring order both Thucydides and Morgenthau
    looked for a combination of old and new to
    accommodate changes while limiting their
    destructive potential

9
Theory
  • Classical realists conception of theory is
    distinct from contemporary realism
  • Thucydides emphasised the context dependence of
    foreign policy actions
  • Morgenthau also denied general laws and
    predictions

10
Case study Iraq
  • Iraq war can be seen from a classical realist
    perspective as a tragedy in the Greek sense
  • At the end of the Cold War US moved towards
    unilateralism. Intoxication with power led the
    Bush Administration to hubris
  • This can be seen in the case of Iraq the
    operation in Iraq was poorly prepared and relied
    on hope more than reason
  • The failure of the Iraq operation reminds us that
    great powers are their own worst enemy

11
Conclusion
  • The notion of tragedy captures the contradiction
    between the ability of man and his propensity to
    destroy with violence what has been achieved
  • Classical realists were pessimistic of the
    ability of the powerful to exercise
    self-restraint but a key theme of classical
    realism is that it offers prudence as an antidote
    to hubris
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