Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Feb 15, 2005 · In this essay we argue that scholars of international relations must work with multiple conceptions of power, suggest how they can accomplish this task, and demonstrate how a consideration of power's polymorphous character will enhance and deepen theoretic understanding of international politics.

    • Michael Barnett, Raymond Duvall
    • 2005
  2. Nov 8, 2020 · Drezner has written seven books, including All Politics is Global and The System Worked. He can be reached at daniel.drezner@tufts.edu. International Relations scholars are certain about two facts: power is the defining concept of the discipline and there is no consensus about what that concept means.

    • Daniel Drezner
    • 2021
  3. International Politics is about the world we live in, the challenges we face, power and struggles, and the opportunities – as well as obstacles – for peaceful relations among peoples, societies, states, organisations.

  4. Summary. The balance of powera notoriously slippery, murky, and protean term, endlessly debated and variously defined—is the core theory of international politics within the realist perspective. A “balance of power” system is one in which the power held and exercised by states within the system is checked and balanced by the power of ...

  5. Power in World Politics | Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Politics. Stefano Guzzini. https://doi.org/10.1093/acrefore/9780190228637.013.118. Published online: 20 April 2022. Summary. The concept of power derives its meanings and theoretical roles from the theories in which it is embedded.

  6. Jan 15, 2020 · In this classic article, in the context of the onset of the Cold War, Haas discusses the various ways in which scholars of his time understood balance of power in terms of (1) the distribution of power, (2) equilibrium, (3) hegemony, (4) stability and peace, (5) instability and war, (6) power politics in general, and (7) a universal law of histo...

  7. People also ask

  8. Where there is politics there is power. It is no surprise, hence, that the concept of power is fundamental to the study of world politics. Power, or, more exactly, the particular way in which it is conceived at any given time, has been a significant constitutive force defining the discipline of international relations.

  1. People also search for