Title: The State
1Chapter 5
The State
2The State and Nation
- State (fundamental conditions/legal criteria)
- Territorial base, geographically defined boundary
(territory and borders) - Stable population
- Government to which population has allegiance
- Diplomatic recognition by other states
- Nation (a psychological attachment)
- Group of people who share a set of
characteristics (history, heritage, language,
customs, lifestyles, etc.) - Nation-states stateless nations multinational
states nations across states
3Liberal View of the State
- Process involving contending interests
- Reflection of both governmental and societal
interests - Repository of multiple and changing national
interests - Possessor of fungible sources of power
- State is sovereign, but not autonomous
- A pluralist arena whose function is to maintain
basic rules of the game - No explicit or consistent national interest
there are many - National interests change reflecting interests
and relative power positions of competing groups
inside and outside the state
4Realist View of the State
- An autonomous actor constrained only by anarchy
of international system - State enjoys sovereignty authority to govern
matters within its own borders and affect its
people, economy, security, and form of government - State has consistent set of goals, a national
interest, defined in terms of power - Power is of primary importance (especially
military power), yet ideas also matter - A statist, state-centric view
- According to realists, once the state acts, it
does so as an autonomous, unitary actor
5Radical View of the State
- Two slightly different views instrumental and
structural Marxist views - Each emphasizes role of capitalism and capitalist
class in formation, functioning of the state - Instrumental view
- State is the executing agent of the bourgeoisie
- Reacts to pressures from the capitalist class
- Structural view
- State operates within structure of the
international capitalist system - State driven to expand due to imperatives of
capitalist system - State action reflects economic goals
- Sovereignty, autonomy is not possible because
state reacts to internal/external capitalist
pressure
6Constructivist View of the State
- National interests/identities social constructs
- National interests are neither material nor
given they are ideational and ever-changing in
response to domestic factors and international
norms/ideas - States share a variety of goals and values, which
they are socialized into by IGOs and NGOs - Norms can change state preferences, behavior
- States have multiple identities, which also
changes, altering state preferences and behavior
7State Power Potential
- Power ability to influence others and control
outcomes produce outcomes that would not have
occurred naturally - Outcome of interactions (within and between
states) determined by power potential (natural,
tangible, intangible) - Natural sources of state power
- Geographic size and position
- Natural resources
- Population
- Tangible sources of state power
- Industrial development
- Intangible sources of state power
- National image
- Public support
- Leadership
8Exercise of State Power
- Diplomacy trying to influence behavior of other
actors by negotiating, taking or refraining from
a specific action, or public diplomacy - Complicated by two-level games (among states and
within states between domestic constituencies)
and cultural differences - Economic statecraft positive and negative
sanctions - Positive sanctions offering a carrot,
rewarding moves in desired direction - Negative sanctions brandishing a stick,
threatening/taking action that punishes - Force (or threat of force) depends on clarity,
credibility (capacity to follow through) - Compellence threat of force to get a state to
do/undo some action - Deterrence commitment to punish a state if it
takes undesired action
9Conceptualizing Choices Game Theory
- Way to more systematically analyze choices states
make and probable outcomes - Assumes state is unitary actor with one national
interest and has unique set of options and
stipulates payoffs - Applicable to zero-sum (one player wins and the
other loses) and non-zero-sum (positive sum)
games - Advantages simplification clarifies choices
enables analyst to see options of the other - Weaknesses assumes unitary state (ignores
internal factors) rationality payoffs may be
arbitrary single interaction rather than ongoing
10Foreign Policy Rational Model
- Common to most policymakers (most Realists)
- Action chosen to maximize strategic goals and
objectives - State is assumed to be unitary with established
goals, a set of options, and a formula for
deciding which option is best to achieve goals - Perhaps most applicable in times of crisis, when
there is a short time to react, when one knows
little about the decision-making process in other
state
11Bureaucratic/Organizational Model
- Foreign policy decisions product of either
sub-national governmental organizations or
bureaucracies - Organizational politics emphasizes standard
operating procedures (SOPs) and processes - Decisions depend on precedents
- Major changes in policy unlikely, likely to be
incremental - Bureaucratic politics occurs among members of
bureaucracy representing different interests - Decisions result from struggle among departments,
groups, or individuals - Outcomes dependent on power of bureaucratic
players and/or organizations
12Pluralist Model/Radical View
- Foreign policy decisions product of bargaining
among domestic sources public, interest groups,
mass movements, and MNCs - Decisions reflect diverse societal interests and
strategies - For Realists and Liberals, states have real
choices - For Radicals, states have few real choices
- Capitalist states interests are determined by
structure of international system and foreign
policy decisions are dictated by economic
imperatives of the dominant class
13Comparing Perspectives on State Power and Policy
Liberalism/ Neoliberal Institutionalism Realism/Neorealism Radicalism/ Dependency Theory
Nature of state policy Multiple power sources tangible and intangible Emphasis on power as key concept in international relations geography, natural resources, population especially important Economic power organized around classes
Using state power Broad range of power techniques preference for non-coercive alternatives Emphasis on coercive techniques of power use of force acceptable Weak have few instruments of power
How foreign policy is made Organizational/ bureaucratic and pluralist models of decision-making Emphasis on rational model of decision-making unitary state actor assumed States have no real choices decisions dictated by economic elites
Determinants of foreign policy Largely domestic Largely external/international determinants Largely external determinants co-opted internal elements
14Challenges to the State
- Process of globalization growing integration in
politics, economics, communications, and culture
increasingly undermines traditional state
sovereignty - Politically globalizing issues force states to
cooperate and compromise sovereignty - Economically internationalization of trade,
finance, production, consumption, MNCs, weaken
states capacity to regulate economic policies - Culturally new, intrusive technologies undermine
state control over information - Rise of transnational crime difficult to
control - Transnational movements (especially religious and
ideological e.g., Christian fundamentalism,
Islamic fundamentalism) call for turn away from
state loyalty toward religious ideas - Ethnonational movements seek national
self-determination
15Discussion questions
- Using your understanding of the key ingredients
of state power potential and supporting your
position with specific examples, present an
argument for or against the following statement
______ is a powerful state. - Describe and justify your selection of the two
most important differences between the realist
and liberal views of the state. - State A has made a credible threat to invade its
neighbor, State B. As an influential world
leader, you have been asked to submit a proposal
recommending a course of action to be taken by
the coalition of states responding to the
situation. Since the coalition has stated its
opposition to the use of military force, your
suggestions must rely on techniques of diplomacy
and economic statecraft. Present a proposal that
provides a series of specific actions that can be
taken by the coalition. - State A is deciding whether or not to enter into
a trade agreement with State B. Using any two of
the three models of foreign policy
decision-making, present contrasting
interpretations of State As hypothetical
decision-making process.