1 / 37

U.S. FOREIGN POLICY POLS 425 professor timothy c. lim / cal state los angeles tclim@calstatela

week 2: introduction to foreign policy analysis. U.S. FOREIGN POLICY POLS 425 professor timothy c. lim / cal state los angeles tclim@calstatela.edu. introduction to foreign policy analysis the study of foreign policy. review of key points from last week.

aimee
Télécharger la présentation

U.S. FOREIGN POLICY POLS 425 professor timothy c. lim / cal state los angeles tclim@calstatela

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. week 2: introduction to foreign policy analysis U.S. FOREIGN POLICY POLS 425 professor timothy c. lim / cal state los angeles tclim@calstatela.edu

  2. introduction to foreign policy analysisthe study of foreign policy review of key points from last week • foreign policy analysis is concerned with a variety of questions: why-questions, who- and what questions, and how-possible questions • foreign policy analysis is interdisciplinary, drawing from a variety of theoretical approaches • there is a special relationship between foreign policy analysis and ir

  3. introduction to coursethe study of foreign policy • review: fields relevant to foreign policy • international relations • social psychology • rational choice • comparative politics • public policy • critical theory • others special relationship between IR and foreign policy

  4. introduction to coursethe study of foreign policy • review: fields relevant to foreign policy • authors also believe that the newradical accounts of IR are important; even more … • their own approach is based on criticalpolitical analysis

  5. introduction to coursethe study of foreign policy so what is critical political analysis?

  6. introduction to coursethe study of foreign policy critical political analysis: six points • critical foreign policy analysis should be empirical without being empiricist: norms and subjectivity matter • both structure and agency need to be considered • politics must be viewed broadly; not just what governments do • sensitive to issues of social construction • foreign policy is never simply the “realm of necessity” • being critical does not entail assuming bad faith about leaders

  7. introduction to coursethe study of foreign policy critical political analysis “taken together, we believe that a critical approach to foreign policy offers significant potential for looking at foreign policy within a wider notion of politics than has traditionally been the case within FPA” (p. 6)

  8. introduction to coursethe study of foreign policy confused? don’t worry (for now). things should become clearer as we proceed.

  9. introduction to coursethe study of foreign policy somebasics

  10. introduction to coursethe study of foreign policy • two basic definitions • foreign policy. the strategy or approach chosen by a national government to achieve its goals in relation with external entities (usually other governments) • foreign policy analysis (FPA). a subfield of political science that seeks to explain foreign policy or foreign policy behavior; FPA is distinguished from IR in its focus on sub-national, actor-specific, and multi-casual and multi-level analysis

  11. introduction to coursethe study of foreign policy • intro: foreign policy analysis foreign policy analysis is a relatively recent field that stands in sharp contrast to the grand theories of IR (e.g., realism) three seminal orparadigmaticworks Decision-Making as an Approach to the Study of International Politics by RichardSnyder Pre-Theories and Theories of Foreign Policy by JamesRosenau Man-Mileau Relationship Hypotheses in the Context of International Politics by Harold and Margaret Sprout 1. 2. 3.

  12. introduction to coursethe study of foreign policy • intro: foreign policy analysis • key lessons • SNYDER. researchers need to look below the nation-state level of analysis to the players involved; focus should be on decision-making process, not just outcomes • ROSENAU.states are not all the same, but there are patterns and similarities among types of states that we can uncover making foreign policy behavior explainable and predictable • SPOUTS. psychological factors (the psycho-mileau) and perceptions are important

  13. introduction to coursethe study of foreign policy • intro: foreign policy analysis • key lessonsled to further refinements, focusing on new research pathways … • small group decision-making (“groupthink”) • organizational process and bureaucratic politics • comparative foreign policy • psychological (cognitive) influences • societal milieux

  14. introduction to coursethe study of foreign policy • intro: foreign policy analysis small group decision-making (“groupthink”) Refers to the process and structure of groups making foreign policy decisions. Group decision making tends to have its own dynamic, but a particularly important aspect is the tendency by participants to maintain group consensus and personal acceptance. The result is often a deterioration of decision-making quality.

  15. introduction to coursethe study of foreign policy organizational process and bureaucratic politics Based on the idea that organizations and bureaucracies have their own interests and compete with other organizations to stay “on top.” Turf battles impact the decision-making process. Organizational dynamics (e.g., standard operating procedures) also shape responses and behavior.

  16. introduction to coursethe study of foreign policy • intro: foreign policy analysis comparative foreign policy Focused on foreign policy events on a cross-national basis as a way to analyze and predict foreign policy behavior for all nations for all time. Effort proved less than successful.

  17. introduction to coursethe study of foreign policy • intro: foreign policy analysis psychological influences on foreign policy Based on the premise that individual perceptions and cognitive processes had a profound impact on the policy making process. Psychological approaches focused attention on the mind of the foreign policy decision-maker.

  18. introduction to coursethe study of foreign policy • intro: foreign policy analysis societal milieux and foreign policy Looked at the overarching social context in which decisions are made: culture, history, geography, economics, political institutions, military power, ideology, demographics, media, and so on. Researchers believed all these factors could play a role in the making of foreign policy.

  19. introduction to coursethe study of foreign policy • foreign policy analysis: contemporary agenda • foreign policy analysis in the post-cold war era is still evolving; there are, however, some clear commitments that most researchers share • commitment to looking below the nation-state level • commitment to build middle-range theory • commitment to pursue multi-causal explanations spanning multiple levels of analysis • commitment to utilize theory and findings from across the spectrum of social science • commitment to viewing the process of foreign policy decision-making (i.e., how policy gets made) as important as the output thereof

  20. introduction to coursethe study of foreign policy changing gears … theories offoreign policy

  21. introduction to theorythe study of foreign policy general notes about theory: definitions simply put, theories are explanations of how something or some process works; theories are used to identify cause-and-effect relationships and to make predictions anotherdefinition. a theory is a framework of analysis within which facts are not only selected, but also interpreted, organized, and fit together so that they create a coherent whole a theory helps us explain or better understand the world in which we live

  22. introduction to theorythe study of foreign policy general notes about theory theories are necessarily simplifications of a more complex whole; theories are not reality, but they are designed to tell use something meaningful and important about the real world

  23. introduction to theorythe study of foreign policy general notes about theory:additional points first, the various theories of foreign policy are not dependent on whether they are accepted or even understood by policy makers themselves second, theory and practice may be mutually constitutive third, the theories we study are sometimes compatible, but sometimes contradictory

  24. an introduction to realism

  25. introduction to realismchapter 2: realism and foreign policy • realism and foreign policy • key questions • what is realism? • how is it applied to the analysis and practiceof foreign policy • what are the pitfalls in applying realist theoriesto foreign policy analysis? • what is a useful set of guidelines for avoidingthose pitfalls and using realist insights tosharpen the analysis of foreign policy?

  26. introduction to realismchapter 2: realism and foreign policy • what is realism? • core principles • groupism. humans are divided into groups and humans depend on their own groups for safety and survival • egoism. self-interest ultimately drives political behavior • power-centrism. power is the fundamental feature of politics to realists, these are all fundamental truths about the the world; they are the rules by which world politics operate. such rules have consequences; they shape human behavior in particular ways

  27. introduction to realismchapter 2: realism and foreign policy • what is realism? • additional principles • central questions focus on the causes of war and conflict • the structure of the international system is a necessary, but not always sufficient for explaining relations among states • primary unit of analysis is the sovereign state • states are first and foremost guided by national interests defined in terms of power • states are rational, unitary actors

  28. introduction to realismchapter 2: realism and foreign policy • what is realism? •  the key concept in realism in anarchy dictionary definition: “absence of government; the state of society where there is no law or supreme power; a state of lawlessness; political confusion.” in realism, anarchy is not the absence of government per se, but is instead the absence of a sovereign authority that exists above the state. to (many) realists, moreover, the international system is not “confused,” but is governed by a structure of power dominated by the strongest states

  29. introduction to realismchapter 2: realism and foreign policy • what is realism? •  implications of anarchy in an anarchic system, an unavoidable logic prevails, one based on the notion,”survival of the fittest.” in an anarchic world, only the strong survive and prosper; you can only count on yourself for help: friends are friends only when it serves their interests one of the clearest enunciations of the principles and implications of anarchy can be found in a few good men …

  30. introduction to realismchapter 2: realism and foreign policy what is realism? a scene from a few good men: “you can’t handle the truth!” what is the “truth” that tom cruise’s character cannot handle? Video file intentionallyremoved

  31. introduction to realismchapter 2: realism and foreign policy • what is realism? • theoretical schools within realism  realism is a diverse school of thought that includes several variants • classical realism • neorealism (or structural realism) • defensive realism (“inside-out” variant) • offensive realism (“hyper-realism”) • neoclassical realism (“foreign policy” realism)

  32. introduction to realismchapter 2: realism and foreign policy • what is realism? • specific theories within realism  the diversity of realism is also evident in specific theories of realism • balance of power • balance of threat • hegemonic stability theory • power transition theory

  33. introduction to realismchapter 2: realism and foreign policy • realism: assumptions, conditions and theories: some caveats • do not confuse assumptions (groupism, egoism, and power-centrism) with scope conditions (anarchy) anarchy is a variable condition; where it is strongest, the potential for conflict is highest; where it is attenuated, orderis stronger • do not confuse assumptions with predictions conflict is not an assumption, but a prediction: realists predict conflict under certain conditions of anarchy

  34. introduction to realismchapter 2: realism and foreign policy • using realism in analyzing foreign policy • along with caveats, using realism requires a careful integration of the deductive logic of realist principles and the on-the-ground dynamics of specific and concrete foreign policy situations • integration is key • examples. consider hegemonic stability theory and “anti-US counter-balancing” in the1990s ----> next slide

  35. introduction to realismchapter 2: realism and foreign policy • using realism in analyzing foreign policy example. anti-US counterbalancing prominent realists, such as waltz, predicted that the collapse of the soviet union would lead to immediate “counterbalancing” against theu.s. it did not happen, but the failure to “predict” correctly was less a problemwith realism and more a problem with a misapplication of realist principlesand a failure to consider the “concrete”details of the post-cold war era

  36. introduction to realismchapter 2: realism and foreign policy • using realism in analyzing foreign policy: key lesson foreign policy analysts must not be dogmatic realists--or anti-realists. they should know theories without becoming overly committed to any one the best approach is to embrace a constant dialogue between case expertise and general theory whenever possible remember this saying … the fox knows many things, but the hedgehog knows one big thing(Archilochus)

  37. introduction to realismchapter 2: realism and foreign policy • using realism in analyzing foreign policy: key lesson foreign policy analysts should be foxes and not hedgehogs

More Related