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What is interdependence?
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All Flashcards in Topic 1.6
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1.6.111 cards
What is interdependence?
Mutual, two-way reliance between states and actors, so that what happens to one affects the others.
What are the four forms of interdependence?
Economic (trade, supply chains), political (treaties, the UN), social & cultural (migration, ideas, media) and technological (internet, data).
Dependence vs interdependence?
Dependence is one-way (a small state relying on a big one); interdependence is two-way — both sides need each other.
Why is COVID-19 a good example of interdependence?
A virus in one country spread worldwide through connection (risk), but vaccines were developed and shared faster together (gain).
Why is interdependence a 'double-edged sword'?
The same connections that bring shared gains (trade, knowledge, cooperation) also bring shared vulnerability when a link breaks.
Give an example of economic interdependence.
Global supply chains — the chain of countries and firms that together make and move a product.
Give an example of political interdependence.
Treaties, alliances and bodies like the UN that tie states' decisions together.
Give an example of technological interdependence.
The internet, shared data and technology that connect people and states worldwide.
Does interdependence remove sovereignty?
No — it limits how freely a state can act alone, but it does not abolish the state.
How does interdependence link to power?
Dependence can be used as leverage — a state others rely on can turn that reliance into power over them.
Why do shared problems push states to cooperate?
Because no state can solve them alone, interdependence drives cooperation through global governance and bodies like the UN.
1.6.211 cards
What is economic interdependence?
Economies relying on one another through trade, investment, supply chains and finance, so one economy affects the others.
What are the main economic links between states?
Trade, supply chains, cross-border investment and linked banks and financial markets.
What is a supply chain?
The chain of countries and firms that together make and move a product across borders.
Why is economic interdependence the deepest form?
Economic ties are hard to cut without hurting yourself, so they bind states tightly and make walking away costly.
Why is the 2008 crisis a good example?
A crisis that began in the US housing market spread worldwide through linked banks and markets, tipping distant economies into recession.
What did the 2008 crisis force states to do?
Cooperate through the G20 and central banks to stop a global collapse — showing interdependence drives cooperation.
What is the upside of economic interdependence?
Trade and investment make goods cheaper and countries richer, and may make war less likely between trading partners.
What is the downside of economic interdependence?
Contagion (one crash spreads), vulnerability if a supplier cuts off, and stronger economies exploiting weaker ones.
How does economic interdependence link to power?
Controlling a key export or supply gives leverage — the reliance of others can be turned into power over them.
How does it link to liberal theory?
Liberals argue trade makes war less likely, because fighting a partner you depend on is too costly.
Does economic interdependence remove economic sovereignty?
No — but it limits it: a state cannot fully insulate its economy from global booms and busts.
1.6.311 cards
What is political interdependence?
States tying their decisions together through treaties, alliances and international organisations like the UN.
How do states tie their politics together?
Through treaties (binding agreements), alliances (mutual support), IGOs (like the UN) and shared rules and norms.
What is the bargain of political interdependence?
A state gives up some freedom to act alone in return for security, influence and cooperation.
Why is NATO a good example?
Under Article 5, an armed attack on one member is treated as an attack on all, so members' security decisions are tied together.
What is NATO's Article 5?
The rule that an armed attack on one member is treated as an attack on all — the core of collective defence.
What does a small state gain from political interdependence?
A voice and influence in shared decisions it would never have alone, plus security through alliances.
What does a large state gain?
Allies, legitimacy and the ability to multiply its strength through alliances and shared rules.
What is the downside of political interdependence?
Less freedom to act alone, the risk of being drawn into others' conflicts, and domination by the most powerful members.
How does political interdependence link to sovereignty?
Treaties and alliances limit a state's free decision-making, though the state still governs itself.
How does it link to global governance?
IGOs like the UN are where states tie their politics together to solve shared problems.
Is an IGO an example of political interdependence?
Yes — bodies like the UN are places where states make decisions together, binding their choices.
1.6.411 cards
What is social and cultural interdependence?
When people, ideas, values and media move across borders so that societies shape one another.
How are societies linked culturally?
Through migration, media and ideas, diaspora communities keeping ties home, and shared global culture like sport and brands.
What is migration?
The movement of people to live in another country, carrying their culture with them.
What are remittances?
Money migrants send back to their home country — for many poorer countries, larger than the foreign aid they receive.
What is a diaspora?
A community living outside its country of origin that still keeps ties to it, sending money and culture both ways.
Why is migration a good example of cultural interdependence?
It ties two societies together — migrants enrich the society they join and send home remittances and culture to the one they left.
Why is cultural interdependence a two-way flow?
Migrants change the society they join and stay linked to the one they left, so influence moves both ways.
What are the gains of cultural interdependence?
New ideas, food, music and skills, remittance income, greater understanding, and diverse, dynamic societies.
What are the tensions of cultural interdependence?
Backlash over identity, fear of losing local culture, strain on services, and powerful cultures crowding out smaller ones.
How does it link to soft power?
Culture that others admire (films, music, values) becomes a form of influence — soft power.
How does it link to development?
Remittances are a huge source of income for many poorer countries, often bigger than foreign aid.
1.6.511 cards
What is technological interdependence?
When states and people rely on the same shared technology — the internet, data, cables and connected systems — so a problem in one network affects many.
How is the world wired together?
Through the internet and undersea cables, cross-border data flows, shared banking/transport/power systems, and a common cyberspace no state controls.
What is cyberspace?
The global network of connected computers, systems and data — a shared digital space no single state controls.
Why is technological interdependence the newest form?
It is the fastest-growing, as banks, hospitals, phones and grids increasingly run on the same global networks.
Why does connection mean exposure?
Being on the same networks means a failure or attack in one place can spread through the shared system to everyone, fast.
Why is WannaCry a good example?
In 2017 one piece of ransomware spread across the internet to around 150 countries in days, locking hospitals and businesses worldwide.
What is ransomware?
Malicious software that locks systems until a ransom is paid — WannaCry was a global ransomware attack.
What are the benefits of technological interdependence?
Instant global communication and knowledge, cheaper and faster business, problem-solving through shared information, and a global voice for ordinary people.
What are the dangers?
Cyberattacks that cross borders instantly, reliance on a few networks and firms, surveillance and lost privacy, and fast-spreading disinformation.
How does it link to power?
Controlling key technology, networks or data gives leverage — those others rely on can turn that reliance into power.
How does it challenge sovereignty?
States struggle to control a borderless cyberspace, where attacks and data ignore national frontiers.
1.6.611 cards
What is a global challenge?
A problem that crosses borders and cannot be solved by any single state alone — such as climate change, a pandemic or terrorism.
Why do global challenges arise from interdependence?
Because sharing a planet, economies and networks means we also share problems that no border can keep out.
Give four examples of global challenges.
Climate change, pandemics, terrorism and crime, and poverty and migration.
What is the collective action problem?
Everyone is better off if all states act, but each is tempted to free-ride — let others pay the cost — which makes solutions hard.
What does 'free-riding' mean here?
Benefiting from others' efforts (like emissions cuts) without doing the costly work yourself.
Why is climate change the ultimate shared problem?
Greenhouse gases emitted anywhere warm the planet everywhere, so no single country can fix it alone.
Why is the Paris Agreement a good example?
Nearly every state signed up to limit global warming (proof cooperation is possible), but the targets are largely voluntary and hard to enforce.
What did the Paris Agreement (2015) do?
Nearly all states promised to cut emissions to limit global warming — a shared goal, but with mostly voluntary targets.
Why is cooperation on global challenges hard?
There is no world government to enforce promises, and states free-ride and protect their self-interest.
Give an example of successful global cooperation.
Healing the ozone layer — states agreed to phase out the chemicals damaging it, a shared problem solved together.
How do global challenges link to global governance?
They are the reason IGOs and treaties are built — to coordinate action on problems too big for any one state.
1.6.711 cards
What is the UN and when was it set up?
The United Nations — the near-universal body for keeping peace and cooperating — set up in 1945 after World War II and run by the UN Charter.
What is the UN Charter?
The UN's founding treaty, which sets out its aims and rules.
What is the General Assembly?
The UN body where all member states meet and each has one equal vote; its resolutions are not legally binding.
What is the Security Council?
The UN's most powerful body, which can order sanctions or the use of force; its five permanent members each hold a veto.
Who are the P5?
The five permanent members of the Security Council — the US, UK, France, Russia and China — who each hold a veto.
What is the veto?
The power of each permanent member to block any Security Council action single-handedly — the biggest limit on UN action.
What does the Secretariat do?
It is the UN's staff, led by the Secretary-General, who run its day-to-day work.
Name some UN agencies and what they do.
The WHO (health), UNHCR (refugees), UNDP (development) — they do the UN's practical work.
What are the UN's main achievements?
Peacekeeping, coordinating aid and health, setting global norms and human rights, and providing a forum that prevents some conflicts.
What are the UN's main limitations?
The veto blocks strong action, it has no army and depends on states, GA resolutions are non-binding, and it cannot compel powerful states.
What is a balanced view of the UN?
A real achievement in need of reform — effective when great powers agree, paralysed by the veto when they do not.
1.6.811 cards
What is global governance?
The way the world is run through cooperation, rules and institutions — treaties, IGOs and international law — without a single world government.
What is the difference between government and governance?
Government is a single authority that makes and enforces binding law over everyone; governance is getting things done through cooperation without one ruler above the states.
What is international law?
The rules that govern how states behave towards each other, coming from treaties, custom, general principles and court rulings.
What are the sources of international law?
Treaties, long-standing custom, general principles of law, and the decisions of international courts.
What is the difference between hard and soft law?
Hard law is binding (e.g. treaties); soft law is not binding but still shapes behaviour (e.g. declarations, norms).
Why is international law hard to enforce?
Because there is no world government or world police to compel a sovereign state, so powerful states can sometimes ignore it.
Why do states mostly obey international law anyway?
Because it is in their interest, because of pressure and reputation, and because courts and bodies can rule against them.
Who takes part in global governance?
IGOs (UN, WTO, IMF, regional bodies), treaties and courts, and non-state actors like NGOs, companies and expert networks.
Why is climate change a good example of global governance?
No state can fix it and there is no world government, so states cooperate through agreements and norms — but enforcement is weak.
What is a balanced view of global governance?
It enables real cooperation on shared problems, but is limited by weak enforcement because no body can compel a powerful state.
How does global governance link to sovereignty?
It works around, not above, sovereign states — cooperation and rules that states agree to, rather than a ruler over them.
1.6.911 cards
What is collective security?
An arrangement where an attack on one member is treated as an attack on all, so members defend one another — e.g. NATO's Article 5.
What is a treaty?
A written, usually binding agreement between states creating shared rules or promises — e.g. the NPT limiting nuclear weapons.
What is a strategic alliance?
An agreement between states to support each other, often militarily, to gain security or advantage.
What is the NPT?
The Non-Proliferation Treaty — states agree to limit the spread of nuclear weapons.
What is NATO?
A military alliance whose members promise to defend one another; under Article 5 an attack on one is an attack on all.
What is OPEC?
A group of oil-exporting states that coordinate oil production and prices — a form of economic cooperation.
Why do states cooperate?
Because interdependence makes working together pay — they gain security, wealth and solutions to shared problems they could not get alone.
Do cooperation and competition happen together?
Yes — the same states can cooperate on one issue and compete on another at the same time.
What is the downside of alliances?
They can harden rivalries into rival blocs, drag members into conflicts, and only hold while members' interests align.
Why is cooperation not the opposite of self-interest?
Because states usually cooperate because it serves their interests — cooperation and self-interest go together.
What is a balanced view of cooperation vs competition?
Both happen at the same time, driven by states' interests, so global politics is a constant mix of the two rather than one or the other.
Topic 1.6 study notes
Full notes & explanations for Interdependence
Global Politics exam skills
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