

CHAPTER TWELVE
International Politics
Study
When we think about international relations, we most often think about war. Given the horrors, tension, and fear associated with war, this is understandable. However, given the number of countries that exist, war is rare. In fact, most of international politics concerns cooperation. Thus, a truly interesting question is: why do wars happen? The tendency in fiction to explain wars as accidents flies in the face of reality. Wars are not accidents; they are the result of conscious, rational action. Spurred by the horrors of World War I, scholars were motivated to focus on peace. World events ultimately put a damper on idealism, which led scholars to embrace realism as an explanation. Realism, with its presumptions that one can explain international relations in terms of strategy, rational action, and power in an anarchic environment, did not explain every war. Scholars focusing on foreign policy analysis challenged liberalism’s presumptions that the internal workings of governments do not matter. There has been a lot of attention paid to the fact that democracies do not fight one another, although scholars do not agree why this is. Other schools of thought have emerged to explain international relations. Among these, one focuses on the dominance of a nation, another focuses on the global economy, and yet another focuses on the global dominance of one country. Students should learn two very important lessons from this chapter. First, there is no one simple theory that explains global interaction; international relations are complex and multifaceted. War, albeit attention grabbing, is only one part of this complex labyrinth. Second, it will, from now on, be difficult to purchase a pair of sneakers without your mind wandering off to consider cores and peripheries.
STUDY QUESTIONS

- What are the three key assumptions that underlie the realist perspective on international relations?
- What are the flaws in the realist perspective? What are the flaws in the other perspectives?
- What prompted idealism?

- What is a hegemon? What role does a hegemon play in international relations?
