Anarchy (international relations)

In international relations theory, anarchy is the idea that the world lacks any supreme authority or sovereign. In an anarchic state, there is no hierarchically superior, coercive power that can resolve disputes, enforce law, or order the system of international politics. In international relations (IR), anarchy is widely accepted as the starting point for international relations theory.[1]

While some political scientists use the term "anarchy" to signify a world in chaos, in disorder, or in conflict, others view it simply as a reflection of the order of the international system: independent states with no central authority above them.

Anarchy provides foundations for realist, liberal, neorealist, and neoliberal paradigms of international relations. Constructivist theory disputes that anarchy is a fundamental condition of the international system.

The constructivist Alexander Wendt argued, "anarchy is what states make of it".[2] That is to say, while the international system is anarchical, anarchy does not determine state behavior in the way in which other schools of IR theory envision it, but rather it is a construct of the states in the system.

Etymology

The word anarchy literally means "without a leader". The word combines the Greek prefix "an-" meaning without, with the Indo-European root arkh meaning "begin" or "take the lead". It is adapted from the ancient Greek (ἀναρχία-anarchia) meaning "absence of a leader”. In common usage anarchy has come to signify both the absence of a ruler and the disorder that some anticipate is bound up with the absence of a ruler.[3] The Cambridge English Dictionary defines anarchy, as “a situation in which there is no organization and control, especially in society because there is no effective government".[4]

Origin and history of term

The British pacifist G. Lowes Dickinson has often been credited with coining "Anarchy" as a term of art in political science in his books: The European Anarchy (1916), War: Its Nature, Cause and Cure (1923), and The International Anarchy (1926).[5][6] Some argue that Dickinson used anarchy in a context that is inconsistent with modern IR theorists.[7] Jack Donnelly argues that Philip Kerr's book Pacifism is Not Enough (1935) was first to ascribe the same meaning and context to term anarchy that modern IR theorists do.[7]

Kenneth Waltz set off a fundamental discursive transformation in international relations with Theory of International Politics (1979). One study finds that the term "anarchy" occurred on average 6.9 times in IR books prior to 1979 but 35.5 times in IR books after 1979.[7] A special issue of World Politics in 1985[8] and Robert Keohane's edited collection Neorealism and Its Critics (1986) focused extensively on Kenneth Waltz's usage of anarchy in explaining international politics. Anarchy has subsequently become fundamentally important in International Relations scholarship.[9][10][11]

Schools of thought

While the three classic schools of thought in international relations theory and their neo-counterparts (Realism, Neorealism, Liberalism, Neoliberalism and Constructivism) agree that the world system is anarchic, they differ in their explanations of how they believe states should, and do, deal with this problem.

Realism

The Realist theory of international relations asserts that states are the main power players in international politics. Realists respond to the anarchic world system by assuming a "self-help" doctrine, believing they can rely on no one but themselves for security.[12] They believe that in the anarchical system, the basic motive of a state’s behavior is survival, which they see in relative terms; holding that the increased security of one state will necessarily lead to a decrease in security of others. Thus, states are forced to constantly take into account that others might have more power than them or are planning to gain more power and are so forced to do the same, leading to competition and balancing.[12]

According to the classic realist thinker Niccolò Machiavelli, the desire for more power is rooted in the flawed nature of humanity, which extends itself into the political world, and leads states to continuously struggle to increase their capabilities. Another traditional realist, Hans Morgenthau, claimed “international politics is struggle for power” elaborating, that “the struggle for power is universal in time and space”.[13]

Key to the realist belief is the conviction that power must be defined in military terms. Realism asserts that stronger military power will lead states to their ultimate goals, being either a hegemon for Offensive Realists or to a balance of power for defensive realists. In his 1988 article "Anarchy and the Limits of Cooperation", Joseph Grieco wrote: “for realists, international anarchy fosters competition and conflict among states and inhibits their willingness to cooperate even when they share common interests”.[14] Therefore, realists see no reason to believe that states can ever trust each other, and must rely on themselves (the self-help doctrine) in the anarchic world system. In the course of providing for one’s own security, the state in question will automatically be fueling the insecurity of other states. This spiral of insecurity is known as the "security dilemma".[12]

Neorealism

The realist concept of self-help as a result of anarchy is also the foundation for structural realism or neorealism. Neorealists are often referred to as structuralists as they believe that much of the important subject matter of international politics can be explained by the structure of the international system, and its central feature, anarchy. While classic realists such as Machiavelli and Morgenthau attributed power politics primarily to human nature, neorealists emphasize anarchy.[12]

This idea was first advanced by Kenneth Waltz, in his neorealist text, Man, the State and War, and expanded on in his Theory of International Politics. For Waltz, the absence of a higher authority than states in the international system means that states can only rely on themselves for their own survival, requiring paranoid vigilance and constant preparation for conflict. In Man, the State, and War, Waltz describes anarchy as a condition of possibility or a “permissive” cause of war.[15] He argues that “wars occur because there is nothing to prevent them”.[15] Similarly, American political scientist John Herz argues that international anarchy assures the centrality of the struggle for power “even in the absence of aggressivity or similar factors”, emphasizing that a state’s interests and actions are determined by the anarchic structure of the international system itself.[16]

Liberalism

Realism and liberalism both agree that the international system is anarchic, and the self-interested state is the starting point for both theories. However, unlike realism, liberalist theories argue that international institutions are able to mitigate anarchy’s constraining effects on interstate cooperation.[17] This is where the two theories diverge.

While liberalist theory acknowledges that the international system is anarchic, it contends that this anarchy can be regulated with various tools, most importantly: liberal democratization, liberal economic interdependence and liberal institutionalism.[18] The basic liberal goal is a completely interdependent world. Liberalist theory asserts that the existence and spread of free trade reduces the likelihood of conflict, as “economically interdependent states are reluctant to become involved in militarized disputes out of fear that conflict disrupts trade and foreign investment and thus induces costs on the opponents”.[19] Liberalists contend that it is not in a country’s interest to go to war with a state with which its private economic agents maintain an extensive exchange of goods and capital.[20]

Thus, for liberals, there is hope for world peace even under anarchy, if states seek common ground, forming alliances and institutions for policing the world powers. Realists tend to believe that power is gained through war or the threat of military action, and assert that due to this power-grabbing system there is no such thing as lasting alliances or peace. Liberal thought however, attributes more power to common institutions than to states, and takes into account the individual attributes that states possess, allowing for the idea of lasting alliances based on common beliefs and ideas. Rather than focusing solely on the military survival of states, liberals believe that common ideas can lead states into interdependence, and so remove allies as threats to sovereignty. Liberalism emphasizes that the real power for states comes from mutually held ideas like religion, language, economies, and political systems that will lead states to form alliances and become interdependent.

This sentiment is summed up nicely by Norman Angell, a classical London School of Economics liberal, who claimed: "We cannot ensure the stability of the present system by the political or military preponderance of our nation or alliance by imposing its will on a rival".[21]

Neoliberalism

Neoliberalism, the process of implementing liberalism’s political ideology, seeks to counter the neorealist claim that institutions are unable to "mitigate anarchy's constraining effects on inter-state cooperation”. Neoliberalism argues that even in an anarchic system of states, cooperation can emerge through the building of norm is the best thing in the worlds, regimes, and institutions. Neoliberal thought contends that the “importance and effect” of the anarchic nature of the international system has been exaggerated, and asserts that nation-states are, or at least should be, concerned first and foremost with absolute gains rather than relative gains to other nation-states.

For example, realists and neorealists assume that security is a competitive and relative concept, whereby the “gain of security for any one state means the loss of security for another”. However, neoliberals argue that states should recognize that security can be cooperative or collective, whereby states can increase their security without decreasing the security of others, or recognizing that the security of other states can in fact be valuable to themselves. Therefore, while both neoliberal and neorealist theories consider the state and its interests as the central subject of analysis, the neoliberal argument is focused on what it perceives as the neorealists' underestimation of "the varieties of cooperative behavior possible within... a decentralized system".

Constructivism

While the concept of anarchy is the foundation for realist, liberal, neorealist, and neoliberal international relations theories, constructivist theory disputes that anarchy is a fundamental condition of the international system. Alexander Wendt, the most influential modern constructivist thinker, is often quoted for writing, "Anarchy is what states make of it".[2] That is to say, anarchy is not inherent in the international system in the way in which other schools of IR theory envision it, but rather it is a construct of the states in the system. At the core of constructivist thought is the idea that, contrary to the assumptions of neorealism and neoliberalism, many core aspects of international relations are socially constructed (they are given their form by ongoing processes of social practice and interaction), rather than inherent. Wendt lists the two basic tenets of constructivism as:

Moreover, borrowing from the ideas of sociologist Anthony Giddens, Wendt suggests that agents (in this case states) can influence the content and effects of a particular structure (in this case anarchy) through the way they act. Constructivism’s formative period in the 1980s came at a time when neorealism was the dominant international relations discourse. As such, constructivism’s initial theoretical work focuses on challenging basic neorealist assumptions. For example, while neorealists argue that anarchy forces states to act in certain ways, constructivism challenges this assumption by arguing that the emphasis neorealists assign to structure is misplaced, and that the attributes of anarchy are not inherent, but constructed by "social practice".

Constructivists, namely Wendt, assert that neorealism’s "structure" in fact fails to predict “whether two states will be friends or foes, will recognize each other's sovereignty, will have dynastic ties, will be revisionist or status quo powers, and so on".[2] Wendt expands on this core constructivist idea by asserting that anarchy is not intrinsically a self-help system, and the way states react to anarchy depends on the way in which they perceive it. If, Wendt argues, states can recognize that security can be co-operative or collective, whereby states can increase their security without decreasing the security of others, or recognizing that the security of other states can in fact be valuable to themselves, anarchy would not lead to self-help at all.

Thus, constructivists assert that through their practices, states can either maintain this culture of anarchy or disrupt it, in turn either validating or questioning the normative basis of the international system itself. For constructivists it is even possible that some as yet unknown way of looking at the situation could emerge as people adjust their ideas about war and socially acceptable reactions to different situations.

The constructivist sentiment is summed up in the following extract from Wendt’s seminal constructivist text, Anarchy is what states make of it:
"I argue that self-help and power politics do not follow either logically or casually from anarchy and that if today we find ourselves in a self-help world, this is due to process, not structure. There is no “logic” of anarchy apart from the practices that create and instantiate one structure of identities and interests rather than another; structure has no existence or casual powers apart from process. Self-help and power politics are institutions, not essential features, of anarchy. Anarchy is what states make of it".[2]

Critiques, syntheses, and extensions

Many scholars have found the traditional paradigms of international relations to be either fundamentally problematic or too simplistic to be of use. David Lake, for example, argues that the "-isms" have impeded theoretical progress rather than enhancing it and that they should be discarded.[23] Gideon Rose coined the term "neoclassical realism" to describe scholars who sought to enrich neorealism with insights from traditional or classical realism.[24] John H. Herz sought to synthesize realism and liberalism into what he called "realist liberalism."[25] Bear F. Braumoeller derived and tested a theory that combines realism and liberalism and showed that neither was sufficient to explain Great Power behavior without the other.[26]

References

  1. Helen Milner. (1991) The assumption of anarchy international relations theory. Source:http://www.jstor.org/stable/20097244?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents
  2. 1 2 3 4 Wendt, Alexander, "Anarchy is what States Make of It: the Social Construction of Power Politics", International Organization 46, no. 2 (Spring 1992): 391–425.
  3. Roberts, James, "Anarchy", in The Internet Encyclopaedia of International Relations, Towson University
  4. Cambridge English Dictionary, Cambridge University Press, 2001
  5. "Sign In". doi:10.1177/0047117806063851. Retrieved 2015-12-15.
  6. Osiander, Andreas (1998-09-01). "Rereading Early Twentieth-Century IR Theory: Idealism Revisited". International Studies Quarterly. 42 (3): 409–432. doi:10.1111/0020-8833.00090. ISSN 1468-2478.
  7. 1 2 3 Donnelly, Jack (2015-11-01). "The discourse of anarchy in IR". International Theory. 7 (03): 393–425. doi:10.1017/S1752971915000111. ISSN 1752-9727.
  8. "Oye, K.A.: Cooperation under Anarchy (Paperback).". press.princeton.edu. Retrieved 2015-12-15.
  9. Milner, Helen (1991-01-01). "The assumption of anarchy in international relations theory: a critique". Review of International Studies. 17 (01): 67–85. doi:10.1017/S026021050011232X. ISSN 1469-9044.
  10. Lake, David A. (2009-06-26). Hierarchy in International Relations. Cornell Studies in Political Economy. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press. ISBN 978-0-8014-7715-7.
  11. "When Opponents Cooperate". The University of Michigan Press. Retrieved 2015-12-15.
  12. 1 2 3 4 Elman, Colin, "Realism", in Paul Williams (ed.), Security Studies: An Introduction, Routledge: New York, 2008, pp. 15–27.
  13. Hans Morgenthau, Politics Among Nations: The Struggle for Power and Peace, Fifth Edition, (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1978) pp. 4–15.
  14. Grieco, Joseph, "Anarchy and the Limits of Cooperation: A Realist Critique of the Newest Liberal Institutionalism", International Organization, 1988, 42 (3), 485–507.
  15. 1 2 Waltz, Kenneth (1954). Man, the State, and War: A Theoretical Analysis. New York, NY: Columbia University Press. ISBN 9780231125376.
  16. Donnelly, Jack, Realism and International Relations (Cambridge University Press, 2000), p. 12
  17. Grieco, Joseph, "Anarchy and the Limits of Cooperation: A Realist Critique of the Newest Liberal Institutionalism", International Organization, 1988, 42(3), 485–507.
  18. Dunne, Timothy, "Liberalism", in The Globalization of World Politics: An Introduction to International Relations, eds. Baylis, John and Steve Smith, (Oxford University Press, Oxford, 1997) p. 150
  19. Margit Bussmann, "Foreign Direct Investment and Militarized International Conflict", Journal of Peace Research 47, no. 2 (2010): 143–153.
  20. Russett, Bruce; Oneal, John R. (2000). Triangulating Peace: Democracy, Interdependence, and International Organizations. W. W. Norton & Company. ISBN 978-0393976847.
  21. Norman Angell, The Great Illusion, (New York: G.P. Putnam’s Sons, 1909) p. 137.
  22. Wendt, Alexander, Social Theory of International Politics, (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1999)
  23. Lake, David A. (2011-06-01). "Why "isms" Are Evil: Theory, Epistemology, and Academic Sects as Impediments to Understanding and Progress1". International Studies Quarterly. 55 (2): 465–480. doi:10.1111/j.1468-2478.2011.00661.x. ISSN 1468-2478.
  24. Rose, Gideon (1998-10-01). "Neoclassical Realism and Theories of Foreign Policy". World Politics. 51 (01): 144–172. doi:10.1017/S0043887100007814. ISSN 1086-3338.
  25. Herz, John H. (1959). Political Realism and Political Idealism. University of Chicago Press.
  26. Braumoeller, Bear (2013). The Great Powers and the International System: Systemic Theory in Empirical Perspective. New York: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 1107659183.
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