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Paradigms
Paradigm
An intellectual framework that structures ones
thinking about a set of phenomena
A cognitive map that helps to organize reality and to
make sense out of a multitude of events
Different paradigms offer different models of reality or
views of the world
Different paradigms have the effect of focusing
attention toward some things and away from others
Idealist
Realist
Identity
Marxist
Globalist
Idealist
As early as the 14th
Century the Italian poet
Dante wrote of the
universality of man and
envisioned a unified
world state
Immanuel Kant argued
that doing good was an
end unto itself rather
than a means to some
other end
Idealist
Hope to minimize conflict and maximize
cooperation among nations
Focus attention on legal-formal aspects of
international relations, such as
international law and international
organizations
Also focus on moral concerns such as
human rights
Woodrow Wilson
US President Woodrow Wilson had formative
experiences that influenced his idealist world
view
He was born in Virginia in 1856 and had seen the
destruction of the Civil War
He was the son of a Presbyterian minister and was
devoutly religious
He was an intellectual, graduating from Princeton
(then the College of New Jersey) and the University of
Virginia Law School and then earning a doctorate at
Johns Hopkins University
He had an academic career as a professor of political
science and president of Princeton
Woodrow Wilson
As president, Wilson championed socially
conscious legislation that lowered tariffs,
graduated the Federal income tax, created
a more elastic money supply, prohibited
unfair business practices, prohibited child
labor, and limited railroad workers to an
eight-hour day
He won reelection with the slogan he kept
us out of war
Fourteen Points
Wilson had announced his
Fourteen Points as a
proposed basis for the armistice
a year before the Paris Peace
Conference opened
Represented a school of
thought that a new world order
had to be constructed based on
a respect for law, the
acceptance of shared universal
values, and the development of
international organizations
Fourteen Points
Wilson envisioned:
Open covenants of peace, openly arrived at,
Absolute freedom of navigation upon the seas in peace
and in war,
The removal of all economic barriers and the
establishment of an equality of trade conditions among
all nations,
Adequate guarantees for a reduction in national
armaments,
Adjustments of colonial disputes to give equal weight
to the interests of the controlling government and the
colonial population, and
A call for a general association of nations
Fourteen Points
Many perceived Wilsons Fourteen Points as
excessively idealistic
For the Allies, they conflicted with the secret
wartime agreements they had made to distribute
among themselves territories and possessions of
the defeated nations
For the defeated powers, the harsh treaties that
would be latter imposed upon them certainly
seemed to violate the spirit of the Fourteen Points
League of Nations
What did survive from
Wilsons Fourteen Points
was his call for a general
association of nations
Resulted in the Covenant
of the League of Nations
with 42 original members
The US never joined the
League because the
Senate rejected it
By 1940 the League had
dismantled
League of Nations
The League of Nations was ineffective because
of two flaws:
Though designed to solve international disputes
through arbitration, it had no power to enforce its
decisions
Its basic premise of collective security never
materialized because at any given time one or more
of the great powers did not belong to the League
Woodrow Wilson
An idealist to the end, when Wilson was
questioned about the practicality of the
League of Nations, he declared, If it wont
work, it must be made to work.
Idealists tend to be more interested in how
the world ought to be rather than how it
actually is
They consider the reality of the moment to
not be the only possible reality
Realist
While realists are just as interested as idealists
in conflict management, realists are less
optimistic about the effectiveness of international
law and organization and about the extent of
international cooperation that is possible
Realists view international relations almost
exclusively as a struggle for power among
competing nation-states
States, like human beings, have an innate desire to
dominate others
Realist
The ultimate goal of all countries is security
in a hostile, anarchic environment
Realist policies are determined by power
calculations in pursuit of national security
Countries satisfied with their situation tend to
pursue the status quo
Countries that are dissatisfied tend to be
expansionist
Alliances are made and broken based on the
requirements of realpolitik
Realist
Realists focus on military strategy, the
elements of national power, and the nature
of national interests more so than
international law and organization
From WWII they learned that the way to
prevent future wars was a balance of
power capable of deterring would-be
aggressors or on a concert of powers
willing to police the world
Realist
In the 16th Century Machiavelli
had argued in The Prince that:
it is far better to be feared than
loved
he ought not to quit good courses if
he can help it, but should know how
to follow evil courses if he must
he will prosper most whose mode of
acting best adapts itself to the
character of the times; and
conversely that he will be
unprosperous, with whose mode of
acting the times do not accord
Realist
Hans Morgenthau is
considered the father of
realism
Wrote Politics Among
Nations in 1948
Stressed the virtues of the
classical, multipolar, balance
of power system and saw
the bipolar rivalry between
the US and the USSR as
especially dangerous
Realist
The realist paradigm
was very popular during
the Cold War
The US and the USSR
competed in everything
Military
Economics
Space race
Olympics
Alliances
Persian Wars
Colonization
brought the Greek
city states in conflict
with the Persian
Empire
Result was the
Persian Wars (500479 B.C.)
In 479 the Persians
were defeated at
Plataea and forced
back to Anatolia
Delian League
After the Persian threat subsided, the
Greek poleis formed an alliance called the
Delian League
Athens supplied most of the military force
thanks to its superior naval fleet and the other
poleis provided financial support
Delian League
In the absence of the Persian threat, Athens transformed
the Delian League into an Athenian Empire
Eventually the other poleis came to resent financing
Athenss bureaucracy and construction projects
Sparta and many other Greek states came to fear
Athenss growing power
When Athens attempted to gain control of supplies of grain,
timber, and precious metals at their source, Sparta declared war
Melian Dialogue
Melos
Small, relatively sparsely
populated island in the Cretan
Sea
Surrounded by several other
smaller islands which were
members of the Athenian
Empire
Officially, Melos was allied
with the Spartans
(Lacadaemons) in the
Peloponnesian War, because
Melos was originally a
Lacedaemonian colony
Melian Dialogue
The Melians, however, remained neutral and did
not send arms, men, or boats to the
Lacedaemons
The Athenians sent a delegation to Melos to
demand that the Melians become a tribute state
of the Athenian Empire, but the Melians asked to
remain neutral
In the ensuing Dialogue, the Athenians present a
decidedly realist argument to support their case
Melian Dialogue
86. The Melian representatives answered: The
quiet interchange of explanations is a
reasonable thing, and we do not object to that.
But your warlike movements, which are present
not only to our fears but to our eyes, seem to
belie your words. We see that, although you
may reason with us, you mean to be our
judges; and that at the end of the discussion, if
the Justice of our cause prevail and we therefore
refuse to yield, we may expect war; if we are
convinced by you, slavery.
Melian Dialogue
89. Athenians: Well, then, we Athenians
will use no flue words; we will not go out of
our way to prove at length that we have a
right to rule, because we overthrew the
Persians; or that we attack you now
because we are suffering any injury at
your hands. the powerful exact what
they can, and the weak grant what they
must.
Melian Dialogue
90. Melians: Well,
then, since you set
aside justice and
invite us to speak of
expediency
Melian Dialogue
91. Athenians: we have come in the
interests of our empire, and that in what
we are about to say we are only seeking
the preservation of your city. For we want
to make you ours with the least trouble
to ourselves, and it is for the interests
of us both that you should not be
destroyed.
Melian Dialogue
93. Athenians: To you the gain will be that
by submission you will avert the worst;
and we shall be all the richer for your
preservation.
95. Athenians: No, your enmity is not half
so mischievous to us as your friendship;
for the one is in the eyes of our
subjects an argument of our power, the
other of our weakness.
Melian Dialogue
97. Athenians: So that
your subjection will
give us an increase of
security, as well as an
extension of empire.
For we are masters of
the sea and you who
are islanders, and
insignificant
islanders too, must not
be allowed to escape
us.
Melian Dialogue
101. Athenians: Not so, if you calmly
reflect: for you are not fighting against
equals to whom you cannot yield without
disgrace, but you are taking counsel
whether or no you shall resist an
overwhelming force. The question is not
one of honor but of prudence.
Melian Dialogue
105. Athenians: Of the gods we believe,
and of men we know, that by a law of
their nature wherever they can rule
they will, This law was not made by us,
and we are not the first who have acted
upon it; we did but inherit it, and shall
bequeath it to all time, and we know that
you and all mankind, if you were as strong
as we are, would do as we do.
Melian Dialogue
109. Athenians: Yes, but what
encourages men who are invited to join in
a conflict is clearly not the good-will of
those who summon them to their side, but
a decided superiority in real power.
Melian Dialogue
111. Athenians: Help may come from
Lacedaemon to you.Your strongest
grounds are hopes deferred, and what
power you have is not to be compared
with that which is already arrayed
against you.
Melian Dialogue
113. Such was the answer of the Melians;
the Athenians, as they quitted the
conference, spoke as follows, Well, we
must say, judging from the decision at
which you have arrived, that you are the
only men who deem the future to be
more certain than the present, and
regard things unseen as already realized
in your fond anticipation
Melian Dialogue
After ending the dialogue the Athenian
envoys returned to the army and
commenced hostilities
In the end, the Melians were compelled to
surrender
The Athenians then killed all the military-aged
men and made slaves of the women and
children
They colonized the island and sent 500 of their
own settlers there
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Alternative Paradigms