
International Relations and World Politics
by Viotti, Paul R.; Kauppi, Mark V.-
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Summary
Author Biography
Paul Viotti is Professor at the University of Denver’s Josef Korbel School of International Studies and Executive Director of the Institute on Globalization & Security. He also served for three decades in the Air Force, retiring as a Colonel after teaching political science at the Air Force Academy for 20 years.
Mark V. Kauppi is the Program Manager for the Department of Defense's counterterrorism training program for intelligence analysts; he is responsible for providing and overseeing instruction to analysts not only from the Department of Defense but also intelligence agencies, law enforcement organizations, and foreign partners. Mark has been an adjunct professor at Georgetown University's School of Foreign Service since 2000.
Table of Contents
Preface | p. xi |
Maps | p. xvii |
Engaging International Relations and World Politics | p. 1 |
Globalization | p. 4 |
Actors | p. 6 |
State | p. s6 |
International Organizations | p. 7 |
Case & Point Global Governance and the Ratko Mladic Case | p. 8 |
Nongovernmental Organizations | p. 10 |
SlideShow Key Actors in IR | p. 12 |
Individuals | p. 14 |
Security, Economy, Identity | p. 15 |
Arugument Counterargument Assessing the Roles of States and Nonstate Actors | p. 16 |
Theory | p. 23 |
What Is a Theory? | p. 26 |
Formulating and Testing Hypotheses | p. 26 |
The Levels of Analysis Framework | p. 28 |
Arugument Counterargument Generating Hypotheses | p. 30 |
World Images | p. 30 |
Realists | p. 32 |
Liberals | p. 33 |
Economic Structuralists | p. 35 |
English School "Rationalists" | p. 37 |
Case & Point Agriculture and the Developing World | p. 37 |
Interpretive Understandings | p. 39 |
Constructivists | p. 39 |
Feminists | p. 40 |
Critical Theorists and Postmodernists | p. 41 |
Assessing the Challenges to Mainstream Science and Positivism | p. 43 |
Normative Theory | p. 43 |
SlideShow World Images and Political Leaders | p. 44 |
History | p. 52 |
International Systems: Definition and Scope | p. 54 |
Independent State System | p. 56 |
Hegemonic State System | p. 56 |
Imperial System | p. 57 |
Feudal System | p. 58 |
Historical International Systems | p. 59 |
The Persian Empire | p. 59 |
Classical Greece | p. 60 |
India | p. 62 |
The Roman Empire | p. 63 |
The East Asian Sphere | p. 65 |
Medieval Europe and the Feudal System | p. 66 |
The Rise of the European Independent State System | p. 68 |
The Emergence of Collective Hegemony | p. 73 |
Arugument Counterargument Thucydides and Power Transition | p. 73 |
The Globalization of the European System | p. 74 |
Case & Point Politicians and Strategy | p. 78 |
Twentieth Century Hegemonic Systems in a Global Context | p. 81 |
Dual Hegemony during the Cold Wa | p. 82 |
SlideShow: International Systems throughout History | p. 84 |
Arugument Counterargument Why a Cold War and Not a Hot War? | p. 87 |
Rising Powers | p. 88 |
China | p. 89 |
India | p. 92 |
Russia | p. 92 |
Brazil | p. 93 |
Geography | p. 100 |
Physical and Human Geography | p. 102 |
Physical Geography | p. 102 |
Human Geography | p. 106 |
Worldwide Religious Traditions | p. 108 |
Religion and International Relations Theory | p. 110 |
Overview of the Major Religious Traditions | p. 112 |
Culture and Religious Beliefs | p. 113 |
Eastern Religious Traditions | p. 114 |
Case & Point Religious Intolerance | p. 115 |
Western Religious Tradition | p. 116 |
Nations and States | p. 121 |
SlideShow Physical and Human Geography | p. 122 |
Nationalism | p. 124 |
Binational States | p. 127 |
Multinational, Multitribal, and Multiethnic States | p. 129 |
Nation-States and Nations without States | p. 132 |
Arugument-Counterargument Explaining Ethnic Conflict and Nationalism | p. 133 |
Nationalism and Ethnicity | p. 135 |
Maintaining Unity in Binational, | |
Multinational, and Multiethnic States | p. 136 |
Outside Intervention, Social, and Economic Approaches | p. 140 |
Globalization | p. 148 |
Current Dynamics in Globalization | p. 150 |
Technology | p. 150 |
Case & Point Five Forces That Flattened the World | p. 152 |
Economic Impact | p. 153 |
Arugument-Counterargument Globalization or Americanization? | p. 154 |
Social-Cultural Impact | p. 155 |
Political Impact | p. 157 |
Capitalism as a Worldwide Form of Political Economy | p. 159 |
SlideShow Aspects of Globalization | p. 160 |
Identifying the Attributes of Capitalist Political Economy | p. 162 |
Arugument Counterargument The Wealth of a Nation and Its Productive Capacity: Gross National Product and Gross Domestic Product | p. 164 |
The Passing of Feudalism arm the New Politics of Capitalism, Mercantilism, and Liberalism | p. 165 |
The Progressive Globalization of Capitalism | p. 167 |
The Ongoing, Twentieth Century Debate on Global Commerce | p. 170 |
Global Governance-The Export Import Trade Regime | p. 172 |
Global Governance-The International Monetary Regime | p. 173 |
Global Governance-The Investment and Development Regime | p. 174 |
Power | p. 184 |
How to Think about National Security | p. 186 |
Interests | p. 187 |
Objectives | p. 188 |
Threats | p. 188 |
Case & Point Key Drivers of National Security Policy | p. 191 |
Opportunities | p. 192 |
Policymaking Conflicts and Dilemmas | p. 192 |
Arugument Counterargument The Rationality Assumption | p. 193 |
Qualifying the Nature of Interests and Objectives | p. 194 |
Prioritizing Objectives | p. 195 |
Competing Domestic and Foreign Policy Objectives | p. 296 |
Arugument Counterargument Balance of Power | p. 197 |
SlideShow Power and Capabilities | p. 198 |
Capabilities and Power | p. 200 |
Political Capabilities | p. 202 |
Social and Cultural Capabilities | p. 206 |
Geographic and Economic Capabilities | p. 207 |
Military Capabilities | p. 209 |
Measuring Power | p. 210 |
Diplomacy and Foreign Policy | p. 217 |
Diplomacy and Foreign Policy | p. 219 |
Arugment-Counterargument Decision Making: Liberal and Constructivist Explanations | p. 223 |
The Historical Development of Diplomacy | p. 224 |
Case & Point NGOs and Diplomacy in the Field | p. 225 |
Diplomatic Processes | p. 228 |
Recognition of States and Governments | p. 228 |
Diplomatic Immunities and Protections | p. 231 |
The Organization of Diplomatic Missions | p. 232 |
Diplomatic Incentives and Disincentives | p. 234 |
Diplomatic Communications | p. 236 |
Arugment Counterargument Crisis Diplomacy and Foreign Policy Decisions | p. 237 |
Negotiation Strategies | p. 239 |
Disarmament and Arms Control | p. 241 |
SlideShow Curbing Weapons Proliferation | p. 242 |
Ways to Conceptualize Arms Control | p. 244 |
Arms Control, Verification, and Compliance | p. 250 |
Weapons Proliferation | p. 250 |
International Law and International Organization | p. 260 |
International Law and the Emergence of Global Civil Society | p. 262 |
Arugment-Counterargument Ideas and the Social Construction of Global Civil Society | p. 263 |
The Emergence of International Law | p. 263 |
Sources of International Law | p. 264 |
The Expanding Scope of International Law in Global Civil Society | p. 265 |
Diplomacy and Security:' Matters of War and Peace | p. 265 |
Economic and Commercial Matters | p. 267 |
Human Rights and the Environment | p. 268 |
International Criminal Accountability | p. 271 |
The United Nations (UN): Objectives and Structure | p. 273 |
Armed Intervention, International Organizations, and International Law | p. 274 |
Collective Security as Collective Law Enforcement | p. 275 |
Slide Show Nationalism and Civil Conflict | p. 276 |
Case & Point Reconstructing Europe at the Congress of Vienna | p. 279 |
Peacekeeping: Managing and Controlling Conflicts | p. 283 |
Alliances and Coalitions | p. 284 |
NATOùThe North Atlantic Treaty Organization | p. 285 |
Arugment-Counterargument Security as a Collective Good | p. 287 |
Alliances as Collective Goods | p. 288 |
Interstate Conflict | p. 294 |
The Rationalities and Irrationalities of interstate Conflict | p. 297 |
The Causes of Interstate Conflict | p. 297 |
International System Level of Analysis | p. 298 |
Individual and Group Levels of Analysis | p. 299 |
State and Societal Levels of Analysis | p. 300 |
Arugment-Counterargument Why Did the United States Invade Iraq? | p. 302 |
National Strategy and the Use of Force | p. 303 |
Slide Show Analyzing Interstate War | p. 304 |
Deterrence, Defense, and Warfighting | p. 307 |
Minimum or Finite Deterrence | p. 309 |
Deterrence through Assured Destruction and Defensive Efforts | p. 312 |
Defense | p. 313 |
Warfighting | p. 313 |
The Post-Cold War Period | p. 314 |
Case & Point Technology and the Future of Warfare | p. 315 |
Concerns with Deterrence Theory | p. 316 |
Moral Principle and the Use of Force | p. 317 |
Arugment-Counterargument A Democratic Peace? | p. 318 |
Just-War Theory | p. 318 |
Conduct during War | p. 320 |
Case & Point Mark Twain's War Prayer | p. 320 |
Armed Intervention and National Security | p. 324 |
Humanitarian Intervention | p. 325 |
Cormpeting Criteria for Decisions on Armed Intervention | p. 326 |
Asymmetric Conflict | p. 334 |
Asymmetric Conflict | p. 336 |
Case & Point The Mumbai Terrorist Attacks | p. 337 |
Terrorism | p. 338 |
History | p. 338 |
The United States | p. 340 |
Causes of Terrorism | p. 341 |
Psychological/Social-Psychological Factors | p. 341 |
Case & Point Rational Terrorism | p. 343 |
Ideological Factors | p. 343 |
Environmental Factors | p. 343 |
The Changing Nature of Terrorism | p. 345 |
Who Are Terrorists? | p. 345 |
Why Terrorism? | p. 346 |
How Terrorism Works | p. 347 |
Arugment-Counterargument Netwar | p. 349 |
Policymaker Responses | p. 353 |
Slide Show Technology and Asymmetric Warfare | p. 354 |
Eliminate the Underlying Causes | p. 356 |
Counterattack | p. 356 |
Impose the Rule of Law | p. 357 |
Encourage International Cooperation | p. 358 |
Transnational Crime and Globalization | p. 359 |
Blurring the Terrorism-Crime Distinction | p. 362 |
TCO Threat Assessment | p. 363 |
Trade and Money | p. 369 |
Trade Theory and Comparative Advantage | p. 372 |
Arugment-Counterargument Why and How Countries Trade | p. 375 |
Neoclassical and Subsequent Economic Thought | p. 378 |
The Impact of Technology on Free-Trade Theory | p. 380 |
Slide Show Tracing International Trade | p. 382 |
Trade and Finance | p. 384 |
How Exchange Rates Work | p. 385 |
The Impact of Exchange-Rate Fluctuationson Trade | p. 386 |
The Politics of Managing Exchange Rates | p. 387 |
Case & Point The Big Mac Index | p. 388 |
Global Governance Tasks: Sustaining Trade and Monetary Regimes | p. 390 |
Maintaining International Liquidity | p. 390 |
Fixed Exchange-Rate Regimes | p. 391 |
Floating Exchange Rates | p. 393 |
Financing Trade | p. 395 |
Global Trade | p. 404 |
Regional Economic Integration and Global Commerce | p. 406 |
Trade and Economic Integration | p. 407 |
Is Europe Unique? | p. 411 |
Development | p. 418 |
Uneven Development and Poverty in Developing Countries | p. 420 |
Arugment-Counterargument The Poor Get Poorer | p. 421 |
Poverty, Capital Formation, and Development | p. 425 |
Aid | p. 425 |
Loans | p. 429 |
Direct Foreign Investment | p. 430 |
Trade | p. 431 |
Case & Point The Complex Case of Transfer Pricing | p. 432 |
Case & Point The Internet and the Developing World | p. 435 |
Slide Show Land, Labor, Capital | p. 436 |
Sustaining Development | p. 438 |
Population Growth | p. 438 |
Environment | p. 440 |
Health | p. 441 |
Military Spending and War | p. 442 |
Economic-Structuralist Critiques and Perspectives | p. 443 |
Dependency Theory | p. 443 |
Arugment-Counterargument Marxist Perspectives on the Plight of Less-Developed Countries | p. 445 |
Capitalist World-System Theory | p. 445 |
Human Rights | p. 453 |
Human Rights and the Human Condition | p. 455 |
Case & Point Women in the Developing World | p. 457 |
The Universality of Human Rights versus State Sovereignty | p. 460 |
Arugment-Counterargument The Social Construction of Human Rights | p. 464 |
Human Rights across Cultures | p. 465 |
Values That Transcend Diverse Cultures | p. 467 |
From Theory to Fact | p. 469 |
Slide Show Human Rights Abuses | p. 470 |
Case & Point Children and Human Rights | p. 473 |
Machinery for Human Rights Issues and Cases | p. 474 |
Regional Human Rights Efforts in Europe | p. 477 |
Other Regional Human Rights Efforts | p. 479 |
NGOs and Human Rights | p. 480 |
Arugment Counterargument Nonviolent Resistance | p. 481 |
Refugees | p. 482 |
The Environment | p. 494 |
A Global Perspective | p. 496 |
Atmosphere | p. 497 |
Land | p. 498 |
Arugment-Counterargument Understanding EnvironmentalChallenges | p. 499 |
Biodiversity | p. 500 |
Freshwater | p. 500 |
Coastal and Marine Areas | p. 501 |
Global Population | p. 501 |
Case & Point Estimating Population Growth | p. 503 |
Slide Show Environmental Degradation | p. 504 |
The Environment and Security | p. 506 |
Resource Wars | p. 506 |
Group-Identity Conflicts | p. 507 |
Civil Strife | p. 508 |
IOs and NGOs | p. 509 |
International Organizations | p. 510 |
Transnational Nongovernmental Organizations | p. 514 |
Glossary | p. 519 |
Credits | p. 530 |
Index | p. 531 |
Answer Key | p. 549 |
Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved. |
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