COLLEGE OF LAW‚ GOVERNMENT AND INTERNATIONAL STUDIES INTERNATIONAL RELATION GFPP 2063 INDIVIDUAL ASSIGNMENT PREPARED BY: NAME: NUR AMIRA SYUHADA BT AHMAD SOBRI PREPARED FOR: DR KNOCK TAPIWA ZENGENI Question 2: Critically discuss the main ideas of the constructivist approach to international relations Preface In our daily life‚ we are interconnected with each other when we start to communicate. Actors such as people‚ ideas and interest allow us to establish relationship
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The history of international relations is often traced back to the Peace of Westphalia of 1648‚ where the modern state system was developed. Prior to this‚ the European medieval organization of political authority was based on a vaguely hierarchical religious order. Westphalia instituted the legal concept of sovereignty‚ which essentially meant that rulers‚ or the legitimate sovereigns‚ would recognize no internal equals within a defined territory and no external superiors as the ultimate authority
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The discipline of international relations (IR) is one that has witnessed a multitude of variations and shifts. It has produced a fair amount of debate between academics within the international relations scholarship. Due to a plethora of circumstances scholars have subjected the traditional rationalist theories of neorealism and neoliberalism to critical re-evaluations. As a result‚ constructivism is a concept that has emerged as an alternative approach to dominant IR theories. It focuses on the
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Strengths and Weaknesses of Neorealism‚ Neoliberalism and Constructivism Introduction Our world since its origination has been a ‘hotbed’ of activity. Activity in the sense‚ we humans have been showing activeness both mentally and physically‚ which have transformed our globe from an archaic one to an advanced one. That advancement is evident in every sphere of our life‚ as well as in the ‘sphere’‚ we live in. In addition‚ that advancement or development is seen in one of the important activities
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Constructivism and the Syrian Civil War Constructivism is a normative international relations theory that seeks to understand the importance of society’s actions and extrapolate its meaning (Adler‚ 1997‚ pp. 319-320). According to constructivism‚ any actor can have xan agency in international relations such as states‚ institutions and individuals and is dissimilar to realism and liberalism where instead of the assumption that states are self-interested and rational‚ it accepts that these actor’s
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Critical Realism versus Social Constructivism in International Relations Roxana Bobulescu Abstract: This article discusses the methodological differences between the British school and the American school of international relations. It attempts to demonstrate that Susan Strange‚ representative of the British school‚ could be considered a critical realist. The aim of the article is to show that her vision of international political economy fulfills the methodological reorientation initiated
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United Kingdom and European Union has always been unique. One tried to be closer while the other tried to be distance yet still influential. David Gowland‚ Arthur Turner and Alex Wright on “Britain and European Integration Since 1945” study the relations between British policy and the process of European Integration since 1945. The study focused on Britain policy that they adopt as the European Union changed. Britain attitude since the end of the Second World War toward the mainland Europe has been
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of Politics and International Relations‚ Vol. 2‚ No. 3‚ October 2000‚ pp. 374–402 The discipline of international relations: still an American social science? STEVE SMITH Abstract This article reviews the state of the discipline of international relations. It starts from statements made by the editors in their editorial published in the first issue of this journal. The editors noted that there seemed to have been less adherence to positivism in international relations than in other areas
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POLITICAL SCIENCE 150: INTRODUCTION TO INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA Fall 2014 Mondays and Wednesdays 10am Stiteler Hall B6 Office Hours: Mondays 1:30-3:30pm or by appointment Professor Jessica Stanton Office: Stiteler Hall 214 Phone: (215) 898-7646 Email: jstan@sas.upenn.edu HEAD TEACHING ASSISTANT Ruolin Su suruolin@sas.upenn.edu TEACHING ASSISTANTS Julia Cramer Patrick O’Halloran Javier Revelo-Rebolledo Jeremy Springman cramerju@sas.upenn.edu pohal@sas.upenn.edu jrev@sas
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International Relations 2: Notes David Wessels 国際関係論2:ノート デヴィッド・ウェッセルズ Copyright © 2009 by David Wessels © 禁無断転載 David Wessels Sophia University 7-1 Kioicho‚ Chiyoda-ku Tokyo 102-8554 Japan 〒102-8554 東京都千代田区紀尾井町 7-1 上智大学 http://www.sophia.ac.jp International Relations 2: Notes David Wessels 国際関係論2:ノート デヴィッド・ウェッセルズ 2009 INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS 2 Table of Contents For Further Reading 2E Chapter 1 Introduction 3E Chapter 2 In Search of
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