UGC NET Political Science Unit-5 International Relations

I. Understanding International Relations (IR)

Definition:
International Relations (IR) is the study of how states, international organizations, and non-state actors interact in the global arena — through power, cooperation, conflict, diplomacy, and law.

Goal:
To explain and understand how the world works — why countries go to war or cooperate, how peace is maintained, and how globalization affects politics.


🌐 II. Approaches to the Study of IR

There is no single way to study IR. Each approach explains world politics differently — based on its assumptions about human nature, power, and cooperation.


1️⃣ Idealism / Liberal Internationalism

Core Belief:

  • Human beings are rational and moral, and peace is possible through reason and cooperation.

  • International relations can be improved by institutions, law, and morality.

Historical Background:

  • Emerged after World War I (1919) — to prevent future wars.

  • Promoted by U.S. President Woodrow Wilson (Fourteen Points).

  • Inspired by Immanuel Kant’s “Perpetual Peace” (1795).

Main Ideas:

  • War is not inevitable; conflicts can be resolved peacefully.

  • Collective Security: if one country threatens peace, all others should act together (e.g., League of Nations).

  • International Law and organizations like the UN help maintain peace.

  • Belief in progress, democracy, and human rights.

Criticism:

  • Overly optimistic.

  • Failed to prevent World War II.


2️⃣ Realism

Core Belief:

  • Human nature is selfish and power-seeking.

  • The international system is anarchic (no world government).

  • Every state must ensure its own survival through power (especially military).

Key Thinkers:

  • Thucydides: “The strong do what they can, and the weak suffer what they must.”

  • Niccolò Machiavelli: “It is better to be feared than loved.”

  • Thomas Hobbes: Life in the state of nature is “solitary, poor, nasty, brutish, and short.”

  • Hans Morgenthau: Father of modern realism — Politics Among Nations (1948).

Main Assumptions:

  1. The state is the main actor.

  2. Power = survival.

  3. Morality has little place in foreign policy.

  4. War is a natural part of international politics.

  5. Alliances are temporary and interest-based.

Example:
Cold War (U.S. vs USSR) — both sought to maintain balance of power.


3️⃣ Neorealism (Structural Realism)

Developed by: Kenneth Waltz in Theory of International Politics (1979).

  • Shifts focus from human nature to international system.

Core Idea:

  • The anarchic structure of the international system forces states to act for self-help.

  • States behave similarly because they exist under the same structure of anarchy.

Types of Neorealism:

  • Defensive Realism (Waltz): States seek security, not unlimited power.

  • Offensive Realism (Mearsheimer): States seek maximum power to ensure survival.


4️⃣ Neoliberalism (Liberal Institutionalism)

Response to Neorealism.

Core Idea:

  • Even in an anarchic world, cooperation is possible through institutions and interdependence.

  • Key Thinkers: Robert Keohane and Joseph Nye (Power and Interdependence, 1977).

  • States cooperate because of:

    • Shared interests (e.g., trade)

    • International regimes (e.g., WTO)

    • Economic interdependence (e.g., global markets)

Concept:

  • Complex Interdependence – states are connected by trade, finance, and communication, reducing the chance of war.

Example:
European Union – economic cooperation promotes peace.


5️⃣ Structural Marxism

Core Idea:

  • International politics is shaped by global capitalism and class relations.

  • Developed from Marx and Lenin’s theories of imperialism.

Assumptions:

  • The global economy is divided into:

    • Core countries (rich, industrialized)

    • Periphery (poor, dependent)

  • Core exploits periphery through trade, finance, and investment.

  • World Systems Theory (Immanuel Wallerstein): Global inequality is structural and systemic.

Goal:
End exploitation through revolutionary or structural change.


6️⃣ Social Constructivism

Core Idea:

  • The world is not fixed — it’s socially constructed through ideas, norms, and identities.

  • Reality depends on how actors perceive each other.

  • Key Thinker: Alexander Wendt – “Anarchy is what states make of it.”

Example:
The U.S. and UK see each other as allies (trust-based), not enemies — though both have military power.

Focus:

  • Identity, culture, and shared meanings shape international behavior.

  • Norms (e.g., human rights) matter as much as material power.


7️⃣ Critical International Theory

Inspired by: Frankfurt School and Marxism.
Main Thinker: Robert Cox.
Core Idea:

  • IR theories are never neutral — they serve specific interests.

  • “Theory is always for someone and for some purpose.”

  • Seeks emancipation, equality, and justice at the global level.


8️⃣ Feminist Approach to IR

Core Idea:

  • IR has been written from a male (androcentric) perspective.

  • War, power, and security are studied through masculine lenses.

  • Feminist IR focuses on:

    • How war affects women and children.

    • Gendered division of labor in global economy.

    • Representation of women in diplomacy and peacekeeping.

Key Thinkers: Cynthia Enloe (Bananas, Beaches and Bases), J. Ann Tickner.


9️⃣ Postmodernism

Core Idea:

  • Rejects universal truths and objective knowledge.

  • International relations are shaped by language, discourse, and power.

  • Focus on how dominant narratives (like “civilized vs uncivilized”) justify inequality.

Thinkers: Michel Foucault, Richard Ashley, Derrida.


⚙️ III. Key Concepts in International Relations


1️⃣ State and the State System

  • State: Sovereign political entity with population, territory, government, and recognition.

  • State System: Interaction between sovereign states; established by Treaty of Westphalia (1648).

  • Principle of sovereignty and non-interference was formalized.


2️⃣ Non-State Actors

  • Actors other than states who influence world politics:

    • International Organizations: UN, WTO

    • Multinational Corporations: Google, Shell

    • NGOs: Amnesty International, Greenpeace

    • Terrorist Groups: ISIS, Al-Qaeda

    • Individuals: Global leaders, activists (e.g., Malala Yousafzai)


3️⃣ Power

  • Ability to influence or control others’ actions.

  • Hard Power: Military strength, economic force.

  • Soft Power (Joseph Nye): Cultural influence, diplomacy, values.

  • Smart Power: Combination of both.


4️⃣ Sovereignty

  • Supreme authority of a state over its territory.

  • Internal sovereignty: Authority over citizens.

  • External sovereignty: Independence from foreign control.

  • In globalization, sovereignty is often limited (e.g., UN sanctions, WTO rules).


5️⃣ Security

Traditional Security:

  • Military defense of state from external aggression.

Non-Traditional Security:

  • Human security, environment, health, cyber threats, terrorism, migration.

Human Security (UNDP, 1994):

  • “Freedom from fear and freedom from want.”


⚔️ IV. Conflict and Peace


1️⃣ Changing Nature of Warfare

  • Wars are now less about states and more about ethnic, religious, or proxy conflicts.

  • Example: Syria, Ukraine.

  • Rise of cyber warfare and terrorism.


2️⃣ Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMDs)

  • Nuclear, Biological, Chemical weapons.

  • Controlled by treaties:

    • NPT (1968): Prevents nuclear proliferation.

    • CTBT: Bans testing.

    • Chemical Weapons Convention.


3️⃣ Deterrence

  • Preventing war through fear of retaliation.

  • Mutually Assured Destruction (MAD) – during Cold War (US vs USSR).


4️⃣ Conflict Resolution

  • Ending conflict through negotiation, mediation, diplomacy.

5️⃣ Conflict Transformation

  • Goes deeper — changes underlying causes (e.g., inequality, oppression).

  • Thinker: Johan Galtung.


🕊️ V. The United Nations (UN)


1️⃣ Aims & Objectives

  • Maintain peace and security

  • Promote human rights and development

  • Foster international cooperation


2️⃣ Structure

Organ Function
General Assembly Deliberative body of all members
Security Council Responsible for peace and security (P5: US, UK, France, Russia, China)
ECOSOC Economic and social development
ICJ Judicial organ (settles disputes between states)
Secretariat Administrative body
Trusteeship Council Now inactive

3️⃣ Peacekeeping and Development

  • UN Peacekeeping Forces maintain ceasefires and protect civilians.

  • UNDP promotes sustainable development.

  • UNICEF, WHO, UNESCO handle human welfare and education.


4️⃣ Humanitarian Intervention

  • Use of military force to stop human rights abuses (e.g., Rwanda 1994, Libya 2011).

  • Controversial as it challenges state sovereignty.


5️⃣ International Law

  • Legal framework governing relations between states.

  • Sources: Treaties, Customs, General Principles.

  • ICJ (International Court of Justice) settles legal disputes.


6️⃣ International Criminal Court (ICC)

  • Established in 2002 by Rome Statute.

  • Tries individuals (not states) for genocide, war crimes, and crimes against humanity.


💰 VI. Political Economy of International Relations


1️⃣ Bretton Woods System (1944)

  • Post–WWII economic order.

  • Created:

    • IMF (stability and short-term loans)

    • World Bank (development loans)

    • GATT/WTO (free trade system)


2️⃣ Globalization

  • Increasing economic, cultural, and political interconnectedness.

  • Leads to interdependence but also inequality.

  • Challenges sovereignty and national policies.


3️⃣ Global Governance

  • Collective management of global issues (climate change, trade) through international organizations.


4️⃣ North–South Dialogue

  • Dialogue between developed (Global North) and developing (Global South) countries.

  • Demand for New International Economic Order (NIEO, 1974) for fairness in trade.


5️⃣ WTO (World Trade Organization)

  • Promotes free and fair trade.

  • Handles trade disputes.

  • Critics argue it favors developed countries.


6️⃣ G-20 and BRICS

  • G-20: Global forum of major economies for policy coordination.

  • BRICS: Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa — promote South–South cooperation and multipolarity.


🌏 VII. Regional Organizations

Organization Members Objectives
European Union (EU) 27 European states Economic & political integration, common currency (Euro)
African Union (AU) 55 African states Promote unity, democracy, and development
ASEAN 10 Southeast Asian nations Regional stability and economic cooperation
Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO) China, India, Russia, Central Asian states Security, anti-terrorism, regional development

🌍 VIII. Contemporary Global Challenges


1️⃣ International Terrorism

  • Non-state violence targeting civilians for political goals.

  • Examples: Al-Qaeda, ISIS.

  • Global response: UN Counterterrorism Office, FATF measures.


2️⃣ Climate Change and Environment

  • Global warming, deforestation, pollution.

  • Global agreements:

    • Kyoto Protocol (1997)

    • Paris Agreement (2015)


3️⃣ Human Rights

  • Based on Universal Declaration of Human Rights (1948).

  • Two main covenants:

    • ICCPR (Civil and Political Rights)

    • ICESCR (Economic, Social, Cultural Rights)


4️⃣ Migration and Refugees

  • Driven by war, poverty, and persecution.

  • UNHCR protects refugees globally.

  • Refugee crises in Syria, Rohingya, Ukraine are current examples.


5️⃣ Poverty and Development

  • Global inequality remains a core issue.

  • Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs, 2015): 17 goals for inclusive growth, peace, and environmental sustainability by 2030.


6️⃣ Role of Religion, Culture, and Identity Politics

  • Rise of identity-based conflicts — ethnic, religious, nationalist.

  • Example: Middle East conflicts, rise of Hindutva, global populism.

  • Samuel Huntington’s “Clash of Civilizations” (1996): predicted future conflicts based on cultural and religious lines.


🧩 Summary at a Glance

Theme Key Thinkers / Ideas Keywords
Idealism Wilson, Kant Peace via law & institutions
Realism Morgenthau, Hobbes Power, survival, anarchy
Neorealism Waltz Structure of system
Neoliberalism Keohane, Nye Cooperation, interdependence
Marxism Lenin, Wallerstein Economic exploitation
Constructivism Wendt Ideas and identity matter
Feminism Enloe, Tickner Gender and security
Critical Theory Cox Emancipation
Postmodernism Foucault, Ashley Discourse and power
Key Institutions UN, WTO, IMF, ICC Global governance
Key Challenges Terrorism, Climate, Refugees Global cooperation

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