International Relations — definition?
Study of interactions among global actors.
Actors in IR — examples?
States, IOs, NGOs, MNCs.
Global Politics — focus?
Diverse worldviews shaping international relations.
Nation — key trait?
Shared cultural or ethnic identity.
State — key trait?
Sovereign political entity with territory.
Sovereignty — meaning?
State's authority to govern itself.
Independence — relation to sovereignty?
Self-governing status of a sovereign state.
Security Dilemma — mechanism?
Security actions provoke insecurity in others.
Power — forms?
Military, economic, diplomatic, cultural.
Realism — core idea?
States seek power in an anarchic system.
Liberalism — core idea?
Cooperation through law and institutions.
Anarchy in IR — meaning?
No global authority above states.
Sovereignty — challenged by?
Globalization and international law.
Nation vs State — difference?
Nation: cultural community; State: political entity.
Westphalian system — significance?
Established modern sovereignty and borders.
Balance of Power — purpose?
Prevent dominance, maintain stability.
Constructivism — focus?
Ideas, norms, identities shape IR.
Security dilemma — effect?
Leads to arms race and tension.
International organizations — role?
Facilitate cooperation and law enforcement.
Non-state actors — influence?
Shape policies, norms, and global issues.
Pon a prueba tus conocimientos con 10 preguntas sobre Introduction to International Relations.
1. What does the field of International Relations primarily study?
2. Which of the following is a major international organization involved in global politics?
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