International Relations. A self-Study Guide to Theory
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International Relations (Theory)
tary liberalism and sociological liberalism, just to mention the most im-
portant strands. To briefly illustrate the differences: whereas republican liber- alism makes a statement about democratic states being more peaceful and more cooperative in their foreign policy than non-democratic states, sociolog- ical liberalism points to the impact of communication flows and cultural pat- terns on state’s ability to cooperate. The latter was pioneered by Karl Deutsch (1953, 1957). Others point to the impact of transnational relations on the co- operative behavior of states and analyze how transnational relationships pres- sure governments into seeking cooperative solutions to problems in interna- tional politics (for example, Keohane/Nye 1970). We will come back to these different strands in Step 2. Whereas, for a long period of time, neorealist and neoinstitutionalist theory dominated IR and liberal thinking was marginalized, there has been a “renais- sance” of liberal theory since the 1990s. The real-world background to this “renaissance” of liberal approaches is the end of the Cold War and the “implo- 161 sion” of communist regimes in Middle and Eastern Europe. No “event” in in- ternational politics has revealed the importance of societal actors (inside the state) for the conduct of international politics more strongly (Risse-Kappen 1994). The failure of neorealism and neoinstitutionalism to predict the break- down of the Eastern bloc resulted in the empowerment of those approaches that attempt to explain international politics by looking “inside the state”. Credit for bringing liberal theory back into the center of IR theory belongs, in particular, to Andrew Moravcsik. His theoretical project is the reformulation of liberal theory in a non-ideological and non-utopian way, making it a system- atic theory of international politics (1993, 1997). His intention was to put liber- al theory as an empirical social science on a par with neorealist and neoinstitu- tionalist theory within IR (1997: 513). For the purpose of our book, Moravc- sik’s “new liberalism” (Moravcsik 2008; Schieder 2013) is of particular interest as it represents the most advanced attempt to formulate a “scientific” liberal theory of IR (please recall our discussions in Units 2 and 3 on what counts as “scientific” theory in International Relations). Additionally, Moravcsik’s work leaves behind the “level-of-analysis problem”, constructing a liberal theory that – while starting with the domestic level in the “classic” liberal way – also pro- vides a systemic explanation of international politics. This liberal theory thus draws level with neorealist and neoinstitutionalists explanations of international politics (Moravcsik 2008). With this reformulation, liberal theory enters the stage of general, scientific theoretical approaches to International Relations. New liberalism thus becomes a fascinating “candidate” within the group of theoretical approaches that form the center of our book. The terms “new liberalism” or “new liberal theory” will be used through- out the chapter. They refer to new liberalism as a general, scientific theoreti- cal approach, as developed by Andrew Moravcsik. Step 1: New liberalism as a “positive” IR theory: assumptions about actors and structures New liberalism has been reformulated in line with the idea of IR as a positive social science (Moravcsik 1997: 514). The basis of Moravcsik’s theory is the clear distinction between liberal philosophers or classical liberal publicists, and liberal social scientists (Moravcsik 2008: 236). It begins with the basic liberal insight already mentioned in the introduction: the liberal claim of the Download 0.79 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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