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Theories of International Relations

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Title: Theories of International Relations


1
Theories of International Relations
  • Week 13
  • Security IIII - Theorizing the Post-Cold War Era

2
Introduction
  • A reminder that the second non-assessed essay is
    due Monday, 2 February at 12 noon at S1.44 (the
    PAIS Undergraduate Office).
  • Today, we consider optimistic and pessimistic
    responses to our future security after the Cold
    Wars end in the late 1980s.
  • The objective is not to assess whether any of
    these views are accurate.
  • Instead, I want to consider these ways of
    thinking as approaches to IR theory.

3
Outline
  • Fukuyama
  • Evaluating Fukuyama
  • Democratic Peace Thesis
  • Evaluating Democratic Peace Thesis
  • Huntington
  • Evaluating Huntington
  • Mearsheimer
  • Evaluating Mearsheimer
  • Main Points and Next Time

4
Fukuyama
  • In 1989 Fukuyama argued that the most important
    thing about the cold war was the clash between
    different ideas.
  • Fukuyama argued 1989 meant the Western liberal
    ideas had won.
  • What this means, said Fukuyama, was that there is
    now no organized body of thinking that opposes
    democracy.
  • Because history is about the clash of ideas for
    Fukuyama, the end of this clash with the end of
    the cold war, means that history is over.
  • Fukuyama sees post-cold war international
    relations as one where the basis for cooperation
    between states has never been better.
  • Theories of IR should now be concerned with
    technical questions of making that cooperation
    happen most efficiently he says.

5
Evaluating Fukuyama
  • What are we to make of Fukuyama's idea that
    history is over? The end of history may only
    affect a fairly small proportion of the world's
    population, given that at best maybe 60 states
    are democratic (according to Huntington).
  • Huntington also makes the point that even if the
    collectivist idea as we have known it is dead
    this does not mean that it will be Liberalism
    that will win as the new idea.
  • If problems appear in the operation of global
    free markets then perhaps some third set of ideas
    will re-establish "history" in terms of a clash
    of ideas?
  • Remember Zhou Enlais remark on French Revolution
  • The political consequences of Fukuyama's argument
    are important to understand. Fukuyama's article
    underlined the superiority of American values to
    Americans and others, thereby providing
    legitimacy to those who sought to 'export' this
    particular liberalism to other countries.

6
Democratic Peace Thesis
  • Before I consider the contemporary notion of the
    democratic peace thesis, I am going to discuss
    Kant.
  • Kant is important because his work provided clues
    about how peace is generated which the democratic
    peace thinkers have seized upon.
  • Kant was interested in identifying the ways and
    means through which an ever-widening zone of
    peace (a pacific union) could be established
    amongst states in order to improve the human
    condition.
  • In trying to generate a system of relations
    between states which generate perpetual peace,
    Kant suggested three things were important.
  • The First Definitive Article mandates
    representative government in which all citizens
    are legally equal. The purpose of this form of
    government is to prevent tyrannies from
    developing inside states.

7
DPT (cont)
  • The Second Definitive Article suggests a "pacific
    federation" of states of the form given in the
    First Definitive Article. This would be an
    understanding that a separate peace exists. The
    benefits that flow from peace would influence
    more states to join this separate peace.
  • The Third Definitive Article focuses on
    encouraging international commerce, requiring
    agreement to a "cosmopolitan law" which
    guarantees foreigners are treated fairly in the
    conduct of trade.
  • Representative governments, he argues, are
    effective ways to meet foreign threats and tame
    ambitious individuals. State aggression is
    tempered in representative systems.
  • However, when liberal representative states are
    confronted by illiberal non-representative states
    the outcome may be war because liberal states are
    deeply sceptical of states which do not share the
    definitive articles.

8
DPT (cont)
  • The modern counterpart to Kant's ideas emerge in
    the 1980s and become a major focus of American
    international relations theory after 1990.
  • The democratic peace thesis has had high level
    political support. President Clinton observed
    that "Democracies don't attack each other" in his
    1994 State of the Union address.
  • Levy (1989) has observed that the democratic
    peace idea is "the closest thing we have to an
    empirical law in the study of international
    relations."
  • At its heart, the democratic peace thesis says
    that "democracies tend not to fight other
    democracies" (and that "democracies fight
    non-democracies.").
  • These simple observations were the result of
    long-term quantitative studies undertaken in US
    universities (eg. the Correlates of War project
    based at Princeton). More recently that
    international relations theorists such as Doyle
    have tried to link this work to the ideas of Kant
    and other writers.

9
DPT (cont)
  • While Kant's notion of perpetual peace seems to
    be some way off in our world, advocates of the
    democratic peace argue that similarly organized
    liberal democratic states replace the logic of
    power with the logic of accommodation.
  • Russett sees two explanations of the democratic
    peace. First, a cultural-normative (or
    ideological) one which emphasises the resolution
    of conflicts by compromise without violence
    inside democracies.
  • Second, structural-institutional explanations
    which focus on internal checks and balances and
    the need to generate public consensus, all of
    which work to prevent violence. Leaders of
    democracies will not fear surprise attack from
    other democracies.
  • Advocates of the democratic peace thesis such as
    Russett hope to achieve is an acknowledgement
    that what happens inside states does affect
    international relations, and that the crude
    Realism of a war of all against all is a fallacy.

10
Evaluating DPT
  • Many objections can be made to the democratic
    peace thesis. The obvious claim, which we are
    not dealing with here, is that it is factually
    inaccurate.
  • Although most social scientists agree that the
    empirical claims of the democratic peace thesis
    are strong, the approach lacks a well-developed,
    convincing theoretical explanation for why war is
    unthinkable.
  • For example, if Kant was right about the
    constraints on war established by representation
    (the popular franchise) then why has
    representation not stopped the many wars between
    democratic and non-democratic states?
  • It may be the case, as Owen (1994) has written,
    that representation (electoral democracy) is not
    sufficient to constrain the resort to war. He
    argues that states must also be liberal.
    Relatively few nations are actually liberal
    democracies (and they are mainly in northwestern
    Europe and North America).

11
Evaluating DPT (cont)
  • An alternative explanation for democratic peace
    may be that liberal states tend to be wealthy
    with less to gain (and more to lose) from
    conflict than poorer authoritarian states.
  • Perhaps the best explanation lies in relations of
    amity between democratic states which make war
    unthinkable (eg. Canada and the U.S.) arising not
    from being liberal democracies but from being
    friends.
  • Even states with very different, mutually
    exclusive systems (Mexico and Cuba) are good
    friends.
  • The obvious point to make again is how much the
    democratic peace thesis serves U.S. policy
    concerns after the cold war. Particularly
    interesting, of course, is how it may justify
    intervention in non-liberal states.

12
Huntington
  • For Huntington, the history of international
    relations is of changing sources of conflict.
    Before the French Revolution, princes fought each
    other in Europe. After the Revolution it was
    nations. The Russian Revolution is the first
    ideological conflict. These were all, Huntington
    says, conflicts within Western civilization.
  • With the end of the cold war, international
    relations moves out of its Western-dominated
    phase, Huntington argues, and the central
    interaction is between Western and non-Western
    civilizations (and among non-Western
    civilizations).
  • Huntington acknowledges that civilizations blend
    and overlap. He identifies the Western,
    Confucian, Japanese, Islamic, Hindu,
    Slavic-Orthodox, Latin American and "possibly
    African" civilizations.
  • Despite this, he argues that the lines of
    division between them "are real" or significant
    for international relations.

13
Huntington (cont)
  • He sees six reasons for conflict between
    civilizations
  • The cultural differences are fundamental and
    ancient
  • The world is becoming a smaller place and the
    intensified interactions encourage animosities
  • Revival of fundamentalist versions of religion
  • The power of the West encouraging reaction
  • Easier to compromise on politics and economics
    than culture, which is more basic. The "What are
    you?" question cannot be changed. According to
    Huntington, "A person can be half-French and
    half-Arab and simultaneously even a citizen of
    two countries. It is more difficult to be
    half-Catholic and half-Muslim."
  • Economic regionalism is growing. Eg. European
    Union, NAFTA etc.

14
Huntington (cont)
  • The "fault lines" between civilizations are
    replacing the political and ideological
    boundaries of the cold war as the flash points.
  • States will still fight each other within a
    common civilization, but these conflicts will be
    less intense.
  • What does Huntington recommend for Western
    policy? He recommends Western policy makers
    cooperate more and unify their own civilization
    with this new threat in mind.
  • In the longer run, the West needs to develop
    greater understanding of the basic philosophical
    assumptions of other civilizations because there
    will be no universal civilization.

15
Evaluating Huntington
  • Huntington's argument is interesting because it
    acknowledges changing sources of tension. He is
    a traditional Realist who has done most of his
    work on states, but here we see acknowledgement
    that things do change in international relations.
  • There are many difficulties with the set of
    civilizations Huntington selects. Is Indonesia,
    for example, part of Muslim or Confucian
    civilization?
  • Are these civilizations as coherent as Huntington
    seems to believe? Islam, for example, is not a
    monolithic body of thought.
  • Realists argue that the state system seems to
    continue to divide civilizations despite
    Huntington's warnings. Common culture did not,
    for example, prevent Arabs fighting Arabs in the
    1991 Gulf War.
  • Perhaps the greatest problem with Huntington's
    clash of civilizations is that it might tend to
    promote the sense of 'the Other' in both the West
    and the Rest.

16
Mearsheimer
  • Neo-Realists assume it is structure of the
    international system which makes the difference
    between an optimistic future of peaceful
    cooperation and a pessimistic view of future
    conflict.
  • Mearsheimer predicted that conflict will return
    to the world and that we will soon miss the
    stability that existed between 1945 and 1989.
  • He has advocated adoption of nuclear weapons by
    Germany as one way to cope with this uncertain
    post-cold war world.
  • Mearsheimers argument seems to be that the
    structure of relationships between states shifts
    with the passing of the old order, bringing more
    chance of conflict.
  • The 1945-1989 international system, Mearsheimer
    argues, was one of anarchy. But, within that
    anarchy we have to consider the significant role
    of polarity. Polarity organizes the
    international system.

17
Mearsheimer (cont)
  • The alternative to the bipolar system which ended
    when the cold war ended, is multipolarity. This
    is when many states face each other without
    falling into two hostile camps.
  • States, especially in Europe, put a lot of effort
    into the balance of power so as to hinder the
    ambitions of rising states like Germany in the
    second half of the nineteenth century.
  • Mearsheimer argues that the logic of
    multipolarity makes it necessarily more prone to
    conflict.
  • The reasoning here is that there are more
    potential enemies for any state. During the cold
    war, west European states had just one enemy.
    Without the binding force of bipolar conflict in
    which two superpowers dominated, a west European
    state may have many enemies both in the
    traditional 'other side' and in what was in the
    bipolar system, 'our side'. The odds therefore
    favour conflict over peace.
  • For Mearsheimer, the only thing that can even the
    odds in a multipolar system is weaponry which
    deters states from war.

18
Evaluating Mearsheimer
  • Perhaps Mearsheimer has a point. 1945-1989 did
    not see a major European war. There does seem to
    be at least a correlation between absence of war,
    bipolarity and nuclear deterrence.
  • But is this correlation just a coincidence?
    Moreover, was the cold war really a period of
    peace given its tensions and the many wars fought
    outside Europe?
  • With the advantage of hindsight we can claim that
    Mearsheimer was wrong in that major tensions
    between Britain, France and Germany do not seem
    to have developed since 1989.
  • The real difficulty with Mearsheimer's account is
    his use of anarchy. He accepts that bipolarity
    modifies anarchy with stability-inducing effects.
    He argues, as we have seen, that multipolarity
    does the reverse.

19
Evaluating Mearsheimer (cont)
  • The question is, why does polarity have this
    effect? Keohane answers that the effect of
    polarity is to shape the expectations of
    policy-makers about other states.
  • That being so, Keohane says we have to look at
    all phenomena that have the same effect.
  • For Fukuyama, these are ideas and for Keohane
    they are the mutual gains that come from
    cooperation via international institutions.
  • The implication of this point about expectations
    is that things other than polarity may influence
    expectations about conflict in an optimistic or
    pessimistic direction.
  • Maybe Mearsheimer's Neorealist account looks at
    the wrong things because of its exclusive focus
    on the structure of the international system?

20
Main Points and Next Time
  • The end of the cold war made Liberal ideas much
    more popular in international relations theory
    because it seemed that these Western ideas had
    won the 'war.'
  • Liberal ideas like Fukuyama's may be thought to
    justify the export of American values and
    practices around the world.
  • The democratic peace thesis became popular after
    the cold war. It argues that democracies do not
    fight other democracies.
  • Many of the ideas of the democratic peace
    thinkers come from Kant, but theory is still very
    much being created to explain the lack of war
    between democracies.

21
Main Points (cont)
  • Huntington's pessimistic view of post-cold war
    international relations is based on the
    reemergence of a cleavage in international
    relations between civilizations.
  • Mearsheimer argued that the shift from bipolarity
    to multipolarity increased the chance of that
    tension leading to actual conflict between states
    after the cold war.
  • Mearsheimer's focus on the effects of the
    structure of the international system does not
    seem to have been accurate. This may be because
    his account of conflict between states misses
    other variables (eg. Fukuyama's ideas and
    Keohane's institutions) which modify
    policy-makers' expectations.
  • Next time we consider critical approaches to
    security.
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