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  2. Neorealism emerged from the North American discipline of political science, and reformulates the classical realist tradition of E. H. Carr, Hans Morgenthau, George Kennan, and Reinhold Niebuhr. Neorealism is subdivided into defensive and offensive neorealism.

  3. Apr 28, 2014 · Neorealism is an outgrowth of traditional balance-of-power (orrealist”) theories of international relations and was first articulated by Kenneth Waltz in 1975 and 1979. It is distinguished from the older theory primarily by its attempt to be more explicitly theoretical, in a style akin to economics—especially by its self-conscious ...

  4. Realism - Neorealism, International Relations, Balance of Power: Associated in particular with the American political scientist Kenneth Waltz, neorealism was an attempt to translate some of the key insights of classical realism into the language and methods of modern social science.

  5. In the Theory of International Politics (1979), Waltz…. …as the originator of the neorealist (or structural realist) theory of international relations. …school of realism, known as neorealism, which emerged with the publication of Kenneth Waltzs Theory of International Politics in 1979.

  6. Neorealism, Italian literary and cinematic movement, flourishing especially after World War II, seeking to deal realistically with the events leading up to the war and with the social problems that were engendered during the period and afterwards. The movement was rooted in the 1920s and, though

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  7. Structural realism, or neorealism, is a theory of international relations that says power is the most important factor in international relations. First outlined by Kenneth Waltz in his 1979 book Theory of International Politics, structural realism is subdivided into two factions: offensive realism and defensive realism.

  8. Mar 21, 2018 · This article addresses the question of what it means to think of a distinctly international ethics by developing a radical reinterpretation of Waltzian neorealism from a Derridean deconstructive perspective.

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