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particularly important in this respect, as it introduces you to the main idea
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Libfile repository Content Cox Cox Introduction iternational relations 2012 Cox Introduction international relations 2012
particularly important in this respect, as it introduces you to the main idea behind the English School of IR – international society. In Part 3 we ‘go theoretical’ by examining other key IR theories in more depth. Here we point out, among other things, that theories have practical applications and should not be indulged in for their own sake. Chapter 11 Introduction to international relations 4 5 looks at two mainstream approaches to the subject: Liberalism and Realism. Chapter 6 examines several alternative theories in the IR toolbox. These highlight different aspects of IR than their orthodox counterparts, often with the goal of unmasking people, units, processes or structures that orthodox theories tend to ignore. In Part 4, we look at some of the key concepts around which IR debates still revolve: war, peace, the state and power. These are central to the study of IR, and are all too often presented as highly abstract. We will try to show why IR needs these concepts, and how they can be used to make sense of the real world. Part 5 will conclude by examining three of the key challenges facing the world: new security threats facing international society, the role of international organisations in global governance, and the changing distribution of power and influence between the West and the East. The final chapter will conclude by looking at three interrelated questions: 1. Is the USA in decline after having enjoyed unrivalled dominance since the collapse of the USSR? 2. Are there other great powers out there – most obviously China – willing, and able, to replace the USA at the head of the international table? 3. Does the increasing influence of emerging powers indicate a more general decline of the West and the rise of what is loosely called the ‘East’? These have been much talked about since the beginning of the new millennium. If analyses of the eastward shift are accurate – as many seem to believe – it represents a massive change in world politics. If, on the other hand, the decline of the West, or the rise of the East, has been overstated, our world will see power and decision making remain in the hands of the same combination of largely Western states that have sat at the centre of international society for the past 500 years. Your job at the end of the course will be to assess these arguments both on their empirical merits and by examining the theoretical assumptions on which they rest. Download 313.42 Kb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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