Political Realism in International Relations
Political Realism in International Relations
Political Realism in International Relations
International Relations
First published Mon Jul 26, 2010; substantive revision Tue Apr 2, 2013
In the discipline of international relations there are contending general theories or theoretical
perspectives. Realism, also known as political realism, is a view of international politics that
stresses its competitive and conflictual side. It is usually contrasted with idealism or
liberalism, which tends to emphasize cooperation. Realists consider the principal actors in
the international arena to be states, which are concerned with their own security, act in
pursuit of their own national interests, and struggle for power. The negative side of the
realists' emphasis on power and self-interest is often their skepticism regarding the relevance
of ethical norms to relations among states. National politics is the realm of authority and law,
whereas international politics, they sometimes claim, is a sphere without justice,
characterized by active or potential conflict among states.
Not all realists, however, deny the presence of ethics in international relations. The
distinction should be drawn between classical realismrepresented by such twentieth-
century theorists as Reinhold Niebuhr and Hans Morgenthauand radical or extreme
realism. While classical realism emphasizes the concept of national interest, it is not the
Machiavellian doctrine that anything is justified by reason of state (Bull 1995, 189). Nor
does it involve the glorification of war or conflict. The classical realists do not reject the
possibility of moral judgment in international politics. Rather, they are critical of moralism
abstract moral discourse that does not take into account political realities. They assign
supreme value to successful political action based on prudence: the ability to judge the
rightness of a given action from among possible alternatives on the basis of its likely political
consequences.
Realism encompasses a variety of approaches and claims a long theoretical tradition. Among
its founding fathers, Thucydides, Machiavelli and Hobbes are the names most usually
mentioned. Twentieth-century classical realism has today been largely replaced by
neorealism, which is an attempt to construct a more scientific approach to the study of
international relations. Both classical realism and neorealism have been subjected to
criticism from IR theorists representing liberal, critical, and post-modern perspectives.
3. Neorealism
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3. Neorealism
In spite of its ambiguities and weaknesses, Morgenthau's Politics among Nations became a
standard textbook and influenced thinking about international politics for a generation or so.
At the same time, as mentioned above, there was an attempt to develop a more
methodologically rigorous approach to theorizing about international affairs. In the 1950s
and 1960s a large influx of scientists from different fields entered the discipline of
International Relations and attempted to replace the wisdom literature of classical realists
with scientific concepts and reasoning (Brown 35). This in turn provoked a counterattack by
Morgenthau and scholars associated with the so-called English School, especially Hedley
Bull, who defended a traditional approach. Nevertheless, the scientists had established a
strong presence in the field, especially in the area of methodology. By the mid-1960s, the
majority of American students in international relations were trained in quantitative research,
game theory, and other new research techniques of the social sciences. This, along with the
changing international environment, had a significant effect on the discipline.
The realist assumption was that the state is the key actor in international politics, and that
relations among states are the core of actual international relations. However, with the
receding of the Cold War during the 1970s, one could witness the growing importance of
international and non-governmental organizations, as well as of multinational corporations.
This development led to a revival of idealist thinking, which became known as neoliberalism
or pluralism. While accepting some basic assumptions of realism, the leading pluralists,
Robert Keohane and Joseph Nye, have proposed the concept of complex interdependence to
describe this more sophisticated picture of global politics. They would argue that there can be
progress in international relations and that the future does not need to look like the past.
3.1 Kenneth Waltz's International System
The realist response came most prominently from Kenneth N. Waltz, who reformulated
realism in international relations in a new and distinctive way. In his book Theory of
International Politics, first published in 1979, he responded to the liberal challenge and
attempted to cure the defects of the classical realism of Hans Morgenthau with his more
scientific approach, which has became known as structural realism or neorealism. Whereas
Morgenthau rooted his theory in the struggle for power, which he related to human nature,
Waltz made an effort to avoid any philosophical discussion of human nature, and set out
instead to build a theory of international politics analogous to microeconomics. He argues
that states in the international system are like firms in a domestic economy and have the
same fundamental interest: to survive. Internationally, the environment of states' actions, or
the structure of their system, is set by the fact that some states prefer survival over other ends
obtainable in the short run and act with relative efficiency to achieve that end (93).
Waltz maintains that by paying attention to the individual state, and to ideological, moral and
economic issues, both traditional liberals and classical realists make the same mistake. They
fail to develop a serious account of the international systemone that can be abstracted from
the wider socio-political domain. Waltz acknowledges that such an abstraction distorts reality
and omits many of the factors that were important for classical realism. It does not allow for
the analysis of the development of specific foreign policies. However, it also has utility.
Notably, it assists in understanding the primary determinants of international politics. Waltz's
neorealist theory cannot be applied to domestic politics. It cannot serve to develop policies of
states concerning their international or domestic affairs. His theory helps only to explain why
states behave in similar ways despite their different forms of government and diverse
political ideologies, and why, despite of their growing interdependence, the overall picture of
international relations is unlikely to change.
According to Waltz, the uniform behavior of states over centuries can be explained by the
constraints on their behavior that are imposed by the structure of the international system. A
system's structure is defined first by the principle by which it is organized, then by the
differentiation of its units, and finally by the distribution of capabilities (power) across units.
Anarchy, or the absence of central authority, is for Waltz the ordering principle of the
international system. The units of the international system are states. Waltz recognizes the
existence of non-state actors, but dismisses them as relatively unimportant. Since all states
want to survive, and anarchy presupposes a self-help system in which each state has to take
care of itself, there is no division of labor or functional differentiation among them. While
functionally similar, they are nonetheless distinguished by their relative capabilities (the
power each of them represents) to perform the same function.
Consequently, Waltz sees power and state behavior in a different way from the classical
realists. For Morgenthau power was both a means and an end, and rational state behavior was
understood as simply the course of action that would accumulate the most power. In contrast,
neorealists assume that the fundamental interest of each state is security and would therefore
concentrate on the distribution of power. What also sets neorealism apart from classical
realism is methodological rigor and scientific self-conception (Guzinni 1998, 127-128).
Waltz insists on empirical testability of knowledge and on falsificationism as a
methodological ideal, which, as he himself admits, can have only a limited application in
international relations.
The distribution of capabilities among states can vary; however, anarchy, the ordering
principle of international relations, remains unchanged. This has a lasting effect on the
behavior of states that become socialized into the logic of self-help. Trying to refute
neoliberal ideas concerning the effects of interdependence, Waltz identifies two reasons why
the anarchic international system limits cooperation: insecurity and unequal gains. In the
context of anarchy, each state is uncertain about the intentions of others and is afraid that the
possible gains resulting from cooperation may favor other states more than itself, and thus
lead it to dependence on others. States do not willingly place themselves in situations of
increased dependence. In a self-help system, considerations of security subordinate economic
gain to political interest. (Waltz 1979, 107).
Because of its theoretical elegance and methodological rigor, neorealism has become very
influential within the discipline of international relations. In the eyes of many scholars,
Morgenthau's realism has come to be seen as anachronistican interesting and important
episode in the history of thinking about the subject, no doubt, but one scarcely to be seen as a
serious contribution of the rigorously scientific theory (Williams 2007, 1). However, while
initially gaining more acceptance than classical realism, neorealism has also provoked strong
critiques on a number of fronts.