IR Theories: Realism

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IR Theories: Realism
IR Theories: Realism
🌐 Core Themes +
  • National interest defined in terms of power is the basis of IR and global politics.
  • Interest and power are signposts of politics.
  • Statism: States are the main actors in IR.
  • International state system is anarchic; states survive by self-help.
  • No idealism, universal morality, benevolence, or altruism in IR.
  • Politics is autonomous of universal moral principles.
⚙️ Features of Realism +
  • 3 'S': Statism, Survival, Self-Help
  • States pursue 'security maximization' or 'power maximization'.
  • Balance of Power: Power must be balanced among states.
  • Security Dilemma (John Herz): Lack of trust increases tension.
  • States are rational actors, pursuing interests not morality.
📜 Classical Realism +
  • Father: Hans Morgenthau
  • Book: Politics Among Nations (1948)
  • 6 Principles of Realism
  • Based on competitive and egoistic human nature.
  • Interest and power guide politics; national interest decides foreign policy.
  • Other thinkers: Thucydides, Machiavelli, Thomas Hobbes, E.H. Carr, Arnold Wolfers
🏛️ Neo-Realism / Structural Realism +
  • Propounded by Kenneth Waltz – Theory of International Politics (1979)
  • Focus on anarchic structure of international system and variation in powers.
  • States aim for security; power is means to security.
  • Offensive Neo-Realism: maximize power for domination/hegemony (John Mearsheimer).
  • Defensive Neo-Realism: moderate policies to achieve security.
  • Structural modifiers: security dilemma, geography, elite beliefs.
  • Thinkers: Kenneth Waltz, Robert Jervis, John Herz, Stephen Walt, Jack Snyder
🎓 Main Thinkers & Works +
  • Classical Realism:
    • Thucydides – Melian Dialogue
    • Machiavelli – The Prince
    • Thomas Hobbes – Leviathan
    • Hans Morgenthau – Politics Among Nations
    • E.H. Carr – The Twenty Years' Crisis (1939)
  • Neo-Realism:
    • Kenneth Waltz – Man, the State, and War (1959), Theory of International Politics (1979)
    • John Mearsheimer – The Tragedy of Great Power (2001)
    • Robert Kaplan – The Coming Anarchy, Asia's Cauldron
    • Robert Jervis – Perception and Misperception in International Politics
    • Reinhold Niebuhr – Christian Realism; Moral Man and Immoral Society (1932), Nature and Destiny of Man (1939)
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