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Plan for Today: Constructivism

Plan for Today: Constructivism. Midterm exam format. Continuing introduction to constructivism: what kinds of arguments about norms/ identities? Detailed example: Wendt’s constructivist interpretation of anarchy. Midterm Exam Format. 2 sections Total: 30 points.

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Plan for Today: Constructivism

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  1. Plan for Today:Constructivism • Midterm exam format. • Continuing introduction to constructivism: what kinds of arguments about norms/ identities? • Detailed example: Wendt’s constructivist interpretation of anarchy.

  2. Midterm Exam Format • 2 sections • Total: 30 points. • Section 1: short-paragraph answer on a concept. • Answer 1 out of 3. (10 points – 15 minutes) • Section 2: essay question. • Answer 1 out of 3. (20 points – 30 minutes) • Comparing two viewpoints on a topic (two authors or two sides of an argument).

  3. Midterm Exam Format • Example essay question: • Contemporary theorists of the democratic peace share certain ideas with the work of Immanuel Kant, but in other respects differ from his vision of the perpetual peace. What ideas do they share, and where do they part ways with Kant’s theory?

  4. Constructivism

  5. Logic of Consequences vs. Logic of Appropriateness(March & Olsen) • Two potential logics of action in any social environment: • Logic of consequences: political action from rational calculation by actors to maximize preferences. • Interests  choices  outcomes. • Logic of appropriateness: political action from norms and identities suggesting appropriate action in given situation. • Identities & norms  choices  outcomes  further identity shift.

  6. Logic of Consequences vs. Logic of Appropriateness • Two potential logics of action in any social environment: • Logic of consequences: political action from rational calculation by actors to maximize preferences. (Realism, Neoliberalism, Decisionmaking) • Interests  choices  outcomes. • Logic of appropriateness: political action from norms and identities suggesting appropriate action in given situation. (Constructivism) • Identities + norms  choices  outcomes  further identity shift.

  7. Constructivist Logic – Norms/ Identities as Dependent Variable • E.g. Finnemore on how and why norms of humanitarian intervention have changed. • Pre-20th century: intervention involved protection of Christians from Ottoman Turks. • 20th century: humanity becomes universalized. • Post-1945: virtually all instances of intervention involve protecting non-Christians and/or non-Europeans.

  8. Constructivist Logic – Norms/ Identities as Independent Variable • Different international systems  identities and norms  different behaviour by actors (systemic-level argument): • Contemporary sovereign states system vs. Nomadic tribal system vs. Feudal system • People living under different systems have differing ideas about appropriate behaviour.

  9. Constructivist Logic – Norms/ Identities as Independent Variable • Domestic politics arguments about states’ identities (unit-level argument): • E.g. Katzenstein on terrorism policies: • Germany: rule of law  pass new, tough laws. • Japan: rule by consensus  teach citizens that terrorism morally wrong and anti-Japanese.

  10. Alexander WendtExample of a Systemic-Level Argument • Q: How does the condition of anarchy necessarily define the identities of the actors in the system? • Wendt: self-help isn’t automatic. • If correct, realism may be wrong about competition and conflict as natural.

  11. Alexander WendtExample of a Systemic-Level Argument • Wendt tries to demonstrate that: • Self-help not a constitutive property of anarchy; and • Self-help and competitive power politics may be created through practice over time.

  12. Alexander WendtExample of a Systemic-Level Argument • Continuum of potential security systems under anarchy: “Individualistic” “Cooperative” “Competitive”

  13. Alexander WendtExample of a Systemic-Level Argument • Wendt agrees current system is self-help and difficult to change because: • Once created, system exists objectively and rewards competition, punishes altruism. • Actors want to maintain stable identities once created to avoid costs of change and uncertainty.

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