International Relations. A self-Study Guide to Theory
Political structures: national and international
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International Relations (Theory)
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- Distribution of capabilities across units
Political structures: national and international
National political system International political system Ordering principle Hierarchy Anarchy Functional differentiation of units Yes No. Like units. States as sov- ereign political units and unitary actors. Distribution of capabilities across units Distribution of power as a “structural feature” of the political system. Distribution of power as a “structural feature” of the system. Change in the dis- tribution of power is a change in the system. 3.3. Structures as causes For a system theory of international politics, political structures have to be defined in a way that enables an identification of their causal effects. “Causal effects” of structures means that the structure of the system “acts” as a con- straining and disposing “force”. Actions of agents and agencies, their interac- tions and the outcomes of their interactions are all affected by the system’s structure. Outcomes in international politics cannot be inferred from the in- tentions and behaviors of the units (“inside” states), but have to be explained in reference to the “external” structures. They can only be explained struc- turally. Effects vary as structures change. For Waltz, a structural realist explanation (that is, through his concept of structure) is the only way to answer the core question of neorealist theory: why do recurrent patterns of state behavior and repeated and enduring pat- terns in the history of international politics, cycles of war and peace, and pe- riods of conflict and stability in the international system occur? An explana- tion in neorealist theory is to say why patterns of behavior recur, why events repeat themselves, why the range of expected outcomes falls within certain limits (Waltz 1979: 69). Recurrences and repetitions within a system cannot 134 be explained by reductionist theories. It is a constancy of structure that ex- plains the recurrent patterns and features of international politics. For Waltz, a structural realist theory can explain why war recurs and de- fine conditions that make war more or less likely, but it will not predict the outbreak of particular wars. According to Waltz, structures explain some “big, important and enduring patterns” (Waltz 1979: 70). These are the conti- nuities within a system. Phases of stable international systems and phases of conflict and war are the “big and important” patterns. It is not the objective to explain single, particular events and short-term outcomes in international pol- itics. This is the domain of theories at the state level. The core question therefore is: What are the causal effects of an anar- chical structure of the system and of a specific distribution of capabilities? Here Waltz draws on an analogy: he uses the theory of the market to explain how the structure of the international system shapes the behavior of states in the same way that the market forces of a competitive market economy shape the behavior of the single firms. Download 0.79 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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