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What is realism?
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All Flashcards in Topic 1.7
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1.7.111 cards
What is realism?
The theory that global politics is a struggle for power and survival between self-interested states in an anarchic, self-help world.
What do realists believe about states?
That states are the main actors and act in their own national interest, seeking power to survive.
What does 'anarchy' mean to a realist?
There is no world government above states — no ruler to enforce rules or protect anyone. It does not mean chaos.
What is a 'self-help' world?
One where each state must ultimately rely on itself for its own security, because no one else guarantees it.
What is the security dilemma?
When one state arms for defence, others feel less safe and arm too, so everyone ends up more armed and less secure.
Why is an arms race a good example?
The Cold War nuclear arms race shows the security dilemma: two superpowers built huge arsenals for defence, making each other less secure.
What kind of power do realists stress?
Military and economic power — the hard power that lets a state defend itself and get its way.
What is the main strength of realism?
It explains war, arms races and power politics well, and is realistic about states' self-interest.
What is the main criticism of realism?
It is too pessimistic — it underrates cooperation, IGOs, law, ideas and non-state actors, and can be a self-fulfilling prophecy.
Which theory is realism's main rival?
Liberalism — where realists see a dangerous self-help world, liberals see room for cooperation.
How can realism be a self-fulfilling prophecy?
If states expect the worst and arm accordingly, they can create the very conflict and distrust they feared.
1.7.211 cards
What is liberalism?
The theory that cooperation between states is possible and that trade, democracy, law and institutions can build a more peaceful, rule-based world.
What are liberalism's four main pillars?
Trade (interdependence brings peace), institutions (IGOs build trust), democracy (the democratic peace) and international law.
How does liberalism differ from realism?
Both accept there is no world government, but liberals argue states can still cooperate through interest, rules and institutions — not just compete for power.
What is the 'democratic peace'?
The idea that democracies rarely go to war with one another.
Why do liberals say trade brings peace?
Economically linked states have too much to lose from war, so interdependence makes conflict less likely.
Why is the EU a good example of liberalism?
Old enemies like France and Germany bound their economies and institutions together so tightly that war between them became almost unthinkable.
What kept peace between France and Germany in the EU?
Trade and shared institutions — cooperation and rules, not a balance of military power.
Does liberalism take non-state actors seriously?
Yes — IGOs, NGOs, companies and individuals all shape global politics, not just states.
What is the main strength of liberalism?
It explains real cooperation (EU, UN, trade) and fits an interdependent, connected world.
What is the main criticism of liberalism?
It can be too optimistic — great powers still use force, and institutions can be ignored by the strong.
Which theory is liberalism's main rival?
Realism — where liberals see room for cooperation, realists see a dangerous self-help world.
1.7.311 cards
What is constructivism?
The theory that ideas, identities and shared beliefs shape global politics, so states' interests and their friends and enemies are built, not fixed.
What do constructivists say about interests?
That they are socially constructed by ideas and identity, so they are not fixed and can change over time.
What are norms?
Shared expectations about how actors should behave — rules of 'right' conduct that guide states even without enforcement.
What does 'anarchy is what states make of it' mean?
The same anarchic world can be friendly or hostile depending on the ideas and identities states hold.
Why is the end of the Cold War a good example?
A rivalry realists called permanent ended peacefully when ideas and identities changed — the weapons stayed, but the enmity dissolved.
Why don't the UK's many nukes scare the US, but North Korea's few do?
Because identity and relationship (friend vs enemy) — not the numbers — decide whether power feels threatening.
How does constructivism differ from realism?
Realism takes interests and enemies as fixed by material power; constructivism asks where they come from and says they are built by ideas.
What is the main strength of constructivism?
It explains change (like the end of the Cold War) that realism and liberalism struggle to account for.
What is the main criticism of constructivism?
It can be vague and hard to test or predict, and it underrates raw material power and economics.
Does constructivism ignore power?
No — it says power's meaning depends on ideas: the same weapons feel threatening or safe depending on identity.
How is constructivism useful in an essay?
As a third voice explaining where interests and identities come from, and why global politics changes.
1.7.411 cards
What is feminist theory?
The theory that gender shapes global politics and that mainstream views, by ignoring women's experiences, tell only half the story.
Is feminist theory just about women?
No — it studies gender (the social ideas of masculinity and femininity) and how they shape power, war and security.
How does feminist theory rethink 'security'?
It argues real security includes everyday safety — from violence and poverty — not just the state's military security.
What does feminist theory say is left out?
Women's experiences and voices, and the unpaid, invisible work (often done by women) that holds economies up.
Why is UNSCR 1325 a good example?
It recognised that women experience war differently and are excluded from peace talks, and called for their inclusion — the gender lens revealing a gap others missed.
What did UNSCR 1325 (2000) do?
It recognised women's distinct experience of conflict and called for their inclusion in peacebuilding.
Why include women in peacebuilding?
Because peace made without half the population is less likely to last, and women see needs and risks that are otherwise missed.
How does feminist theory challenge realism?
It questions realism's 'gender-neutral' state and narrow, military idea of security, asking who is left out.
What is the main strength of feminist theory?
It reveals gender gaps other theories ignore, broadens 'security', and has changed real policy (e.g. UNSCR 1325).
What is the main criticism of feminist theory?
Critics say it focuses on one factor (gender), is harder to apply to great-power war, and feminists differ on approach.
What HL theme does feminist theory link to?
Equality — and human security and rights, where excluded groups and everyday safety come to the fore.
1.7.511 cards
What is post-colonial theory?
The theory that the history of empire still shapes today's global inequalities and whose ideas count — the colonial past did not end with independence.
What are the Global North and Global South?
The Global North = richer, mostly former colonising countries; the Global South = poorer, mostly formerly colonised countries. The divide has colonial roots.
Why was independence 'not a clean break'?
New states inherited borders, economies and institutions designed to serve the empire, not them — so the colonial legacy persisted.
Why are Africa's colonial borders a good example?
Europeans drew them to suit themselves, splitting or forcing together ethnic groups, and independent states inherited them — fuelling conflict ever since.
Who drew Africa's colonial borders and why?
European powers in the late 1800s, to suit their own interests — ignoring the people who actually lived there.
How does post-colonial theory explain global inequality?
It traces the North–South wealth divide to centuries of colonial extraction and domination, not just present-day choices.
What does post-colonial theory say about 'whose ideas count'?
That mainstream theories reflect a Western viewpoint and marginalise the perspectives of formerly colonised peoples.
What is the main strength of post-colonial theory?
It explains the historical roots of global inequality and highlights whose voices are marginalised.
What is the main criticism of post-colonial theory?
It can over-focus on the past and downplay present-day internal factors and post-independence choices.
What HL theme does post-colonial theory link to?
Equality — and development and power, where the North–South divide and domination come to the fore.
What does 'ongoing domination' mean here?
That economic and cultural control by powerful states can continue even after formal empire and direct rule have ended.
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Why think of the theories as 'lenses'?
Because each highlights something real about global politics and misses what the others catch, so no single one is simply 'the truth'.
Realism in one line?
States seek power and survival in a self-help world — best for explaining conflict.
Liberalism in one line?
Cooperation is possible through trade, democracy and institutions — best for explaining cooperation.
Constructivism in one line?
Ideas and identities shape what states want — best for explaining change.
Feminist theory in one line?
Gender shapes power, and women's experiences are left out — best for who is excluded and the human cost.
Post-colonial theory in one line?
The legacy of empire still shapes today's inequalities — best for the North–South divide and colonial roots.
What are the 'mainstream' theories?
Realism and liberalism — they debate how states pursue their interests.
What are the 'critical' theories?
Constructivism, feminist and post-colonial theory — they ask where interests come from and who is left out.
What is the exam skill in comparing theories?
Apply several lenses to the same event, show what each reveals and misses, and reach a judgement.
What earns the top marks in a theory essay?
Using theories against each other on one event and reaching a clear judgement — not describing them one by one.
How do you choose which theories to use?
Match the lens to the case: realism/post-colonial/feminist for conflict, liberalism/constructivism for cooperation and change.
Topic 1.7 study notes
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Global Politics exam skills
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