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Alternatives to Realism: Pluralist Liberalism and Globalism
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Page 1: Alternatives to Realism: Pluralist Liberalism and Globalism.

Alternatives to Realism: Pluralist Liberalism and

Globalism

Page 2: Alternatives to Realism: Pluralist Liberalism and Globalism.

Pluralism

1. Waltz is wrong to focus on security and conflict.

2. Other types of interaction are vital to understand the international system (e.g., economic)

--Leads to mutual interdependence

(“Nice Guys” of IR:Keohane, Nye, Caporaso,Ruggie, Krasner)

Page 3: Alternatives to Realism: Pluralist Liberalism and Globalism.

Pluralism (continued)

3. Add economics to achieve an “analytical clean-up” of neo-realism.

4. Account for economic interests, not just security interests

Page 4: Alternatives to Realism: Pluralist Liberalism and Globalism.

Pluralism (continued)

1. If states are bad, let’s curb them.

Disown Hobbes and downplay the

state.

2. Create “regimes”

3. John Ruggie (1975)

4. Stephen Krasner (1982)

Page 5: Alternatives to Realism: Pluralist Liberalism and Globalism.

Pluralism (continued)

A regime is a “set of expectations, rules and regulations, plans, organizational energies and financial commitments, which have been accepted by a group of states” (Ruggie, 1975)

Page 6: Alternatives to Realism: Pluralist Liberalism and Globalism.

Pluralism (continued)

Regimes as “Social Institutions”

They consist of implicit or explicit:

1. Principles2. Norms3. Rules and decision-making procedures Examples--GATT and OPEC

NB: Regimes are made up of states

Page 7: Alternatives to Realism: Pluralist Liberalism and Globalism.

Pluralism (continued)

Regimes as Intermediate Factors

They help to account for cooperation and discord.Behavior is limited by the norms and rules of the

regime.Regime theory de-emphasizes the state.

Page 8: Alternatives to Realism: Pluralist Liberalism and Globalism.

Pluralism (continued)

The Wall Begins to Crumble

Attacks on the State as the Unit of Analysis:

“Turbulence” Rosenau (1990)“Region States” Ohmae (1995)Non-Traditional Threats: terrorism, drugs,

crimeInformation RevolutionTechnology and Finance

Page 9: Alternatives to Realism: Pluralist Liberalism and Globalism.

Globalism

(Wallerstein, Polanyi, etc.)

A More Radical Critique

Page 10: Alternatives to Realism: Pluralist Liberalism and Globalism.

Globalism (Continued)

Rejection of liberalism and neo- classical economic theory

View of the International System:

Integrated capitalist world economyCeaseless quest for accumulation

Page 11: Alternatives to Realism: Pluralist Liberalism and Globalism.

Globalism (Continued)Countries Belong to One of Three Categories:

1. Core (capital intensive)2. Periphery (labor intensive3. Semi-periphery (mixture)

Page 12: Alternatives to Realism: Pluralist Liberalism and Globalism.

Globalism (continued)External Behavior

Core States maintain the world economy by military or other means

Change in the World Economy1. Economic contraction and expansion2. Upward and downward mobility of states

Page 13: Alternatives to Realism: Pluralist Liberalism and Globalism.

Globalism (summary)1. The behavior of states is governed by the anarchic structure of the world economy.

2. Conflict is natural in the world economy.

3. Geographically-based actors are central.

4. State behavior, however, is not rational.

5. Nation-states consist of capital, labor, and the means of coercion.

Page 14: Alternatives to Realism: Pluralist Liberalism and Globalism.

Dependency Theory

Emphasis on the internal consequences of dominance relations

Page 15: Alternatives to Realism: Pluralist Liberalism and Globalism.

Dependency Theory (Continued)

“Penetration”by a dominant society and its forces

Transnational corporationsMilitary forcesPolitical advisors and missionaries

Page 16: Alternatives to Realism: Pluralist Liberalism and Globalism.

Dependency Theory (Continued)

Penetrate weak, dependent societiesDrain local resourcesTransfer economic surplus to dominant

societyDistorts the economic and social structure

Page 17: Alternatives to Realism: Pluralist Liberalism and Globalism.

Dependency Theory (Continued)

Policy Implications

Self-reliant developmentEncourage counter-structures, policies, and values