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IR Final Study Guide
Final Exam Spring 2007
64
International Studies
Undergraduate 2
05/10/2007

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Cards

Term
CATNETS
Definition
Category + Net

Low cat/low net: no repeated interaction, hard to cooperate, hard to know if cooperating

Lowcat/high net: Could have lots of different identities but all connected

High cat/ low net: can get “trigger” that could create high cooperation but ephemeral, quickly goes away
Term
Entrepreneurs
Definition
ppl who try to spread norms, ideas, lead collective action, take positions of power for POLICITAL opportunities…try to achieve brokerage position to increase power
Term
Brokerage
Definition
leverage, only person able to speak for group

Activate/create identity boundaries
Term
Boundary formation
Definition
makes identity salient

Key development in collective violence
Term
Polarization
Definition
make boundaries congruent with social ties

no mixing of groups, cut social ties
Brokers become very important
Term
Levels of analysis for Iraq
Definition
o 4th level – there was Oil in Iraq, general interest in friends in the region
o 3rd level – some say we are just gun-totting cowboys that are bellicose; may be something to our culture…
 Resource dependency – need oil
 Structure of US government – President more powerful than other democracies
o 2nd level – distribution of power in defense department, agencies
o 1st level – something about these individuals or administrations that made them more prone to war than others
Term
Threat Inflation
Definition
Framing and Public Opinion,

WMD's in Iraq
Term
Chain-Ganging
Definition
opposite of band-wagoning,

creating strategic military alliance when gearing up for war—ganging up against the big power—balancing
Term
Buckpassing
Definition
pushing burden onto other countries to form alliances (opposite of chain-ganging)

ex. NATO during cold war—we paid for everything but Germany still benefited
Term
Client States
Definition
States that wouldn;t exist without the benfit of US power

Central America in the 1980's
Pakistan Musharraf
Term
Cognitive biases

What are the three types?
Definition
#1 prospect theory
#2 selective hearing
#3 sale at the grocery store vs. sale at the care dealer—in which case does 10cents matter
Term
Audience Costs
Definition
trapped by rhetoric

makes a more credible commitment if everyone has heard it
Term
Compellance vs. Deterrance

which is harder, why?
Definition
stop people from doing something they’re already doing

EX. North Korea before was deterrence, now compellence

Compellance harder than deterrence

No lose of face in deterrence; not doing it anyway

But if compellence, already doing and invested political capital would LOSE serious face if he capitulates, backs down.
Term
Credible Commitments
Definition
how credible is the threat?
Term
Bridgeburning
Definition
bolsters credibility, heightened threat, no option of return

ancient army literally burned the bridge
Term
Counter-Strategies

Salami Tactics?
Definition
each incursion small enough that the other side isn’t going to trigger the response (kid in edging into water)

salami tactic is one type
EX 1982 Israel Lebanon war—Sharon couldn’t get gov’t to commit to war, troops on border, went a little into border
Term
Democide
Definition
Theory: within a democracy you aren’t going to get the same type of mass violence than with other types of govt.

Democratics work hard to prevent violence
EX: U.S. ethnic cleansing of native Americans (but didn’t recognize them as citizens, outlier Trail of Tears)

British empire starved India (but also didn’t quite recognize as “part of us”)
Term
Democratic Peace

what it is? why is it important?
Definition
What is it?
 Democracies don’t go to war with each
o Why does it matter?
 American foreign policy has focused on democracy promotion as a means to more peaceful
 Less balance of power due to most powers being democratic,
Term
The origin of democratic peace theory

(3 factors)
Definition
Kant – “perpetual peace” what would we need to have a world without war? Get it through 3 factors:

1. Spread of trade, market relations….more trade, less incentive …more costly to go to war
2. Republican governments (liberal democracy) – respected rule of law and thus resolve disputes this way
3. Formation of international institutions, confederacies
Term
Liberal Explanations for Democratic Peace (4 explanations?)
Definition
1. TRADE: more trade, less war because costs for going to war would be higher…

2. Institutional Mechanisms: due to checks and balances more costs, must get authorization, get public debate…

3. Credible commitments: democracies do it better

4. Any sort of negotiation must “sink” a lot of political capital into getting it passed and advocating for the treaty
Term
Constructivists Explanations for Democratic Peace
Definition
1. Democratic Norms – fight things out in political arena, go to courts or the ballots not with armed revenge or armed justice (vigilante)

2. Democracies come to see themselves as “in” groups where war is not an option, self-fulfilling prophecy?
Term
Criticisms of Dem Peace Theory
Definition
1. Not a lot of democracies prior to 1945, no record!

2. Might be artifact of the Cold War alliances…

EX: Guatemala 1950 democratic regime nationalizes banana industry - US sends CIA topples democratic regime
Term
Fashoda crisis
Definition
Scramble for Africa; reason why French and English didn’t fight wasn’t due to democratic but due to power-politics, fear of Germany coming in.
Term
Arguments about democratic transitions
Definition
Snyder – democratic transitions make states more warlike than if weren’t going through
Term
Democratic victory
Definition
1. Tend to win the wars they fight
2. Leaders must generate support for war
3. Ppl more likely to put more effort into the war since it was legitimated by them


BUT

1. What about France – lost WWI
2. What about Vietnam?
Term
Deterrence

and the

3 elements of deterrence threat
Definition
threat to inflict punishment on target if it does something you don’t want it to do (military, economic, sanctions…)

1. By putting forces on military readiness can show other states that you are ready to act if things fall out

Three elements:

1. Magnitude – scale of punishment (nuclear > sanctions), how much punishment

2. Certainty – how likely state is to act out a punishment if other state calls its bluff, credibility of threat

3. Celerity (speed) – how fast can punishment come down on aggressor
--Speed with which death penalty work undermines effect, impact
Term
Diversionary War
Definition
used to deflect domestic problems, Maldive islands for Argentina

Wag the Dog
Term
Empire
Definition
Unipolarity

Hegemony
--constitutional order (uses const. to excercize order over other states)

framwork where politics of empire are reduced to politics of hegemony

(core with several subagents that control regions so that there is a system that allows the core to unattach certain agents so that they won't be involved in problems. At the same time, keeps control of factions)
Term
Indirect rule in Empire
Definition
gives local groups signifigant amount of autonomy

can cause principal agent problems and corruption
Term
multi-vocal signaling
Definition
Bush's speeches when he directs messages at evangelicals
Term
"Commons" Problem in Environmental Politics
Definition
free-rider / public action problem things that everyone shares, seas air—who takes care of it, free rider problems, barriers to collective action
Term
Negative externalities in environment
Definition
Negative consequences caused by actions that aren’t associated with the problems external to why something happened in the first place

EX: —pollution increasing asthma—

EX: You drive an SUV, pay lots of money for the car and gas an insurance and you are getting a certain amount of things for it—there are other costs built in..the more you drive the more the road gets worn down—so we collect taxes, any cost that is not part of the market
Term
Market solutions for environment
Definition
Trading in shares of pollution
Term
Intra-ethnic policing
Definition
both sides can demonstrate they will police their own side.
Term
The Role of Identity in Ethnic Conflict
Definition
Conflicts that cling to specific identities (national, religious, etc)

2. Salient identities rise when states lose control over monopoly on violence

3. Insecurity in mixed ethnic groups leads to local security dilemmas (no longer safe if not same ethnic group)

4. Commitment problems follow because can’t trust other groups
Term
Opportunity hoarding in ethnic conflict
Definition
actors engage in strategies to control resources by setting themselves as Brokers
Term
Economic trends of globalization
Definition
more and more trading relations (dip after WWII)

1. Great increase in FDI from 1970-1990-2000; nothing quite like firm in one country investing in other country (goods produced, composed by several companies
2. Firms take advantage of low labor/capital ratio
3. Int’l organizations (IO) multiply like “bunnies”
Term
State capacity and regime type in ethnic conflict
Definition
how different states are able to deal with ethnic conflict, in a more liberalized state you might have more conflict, if you have a very closed regime then there isn’t room for dissent—if you have an open state you need a regime to maintain it.

1. high capacity open state can maintain order (USA)
2. low capacity closed state (the sudan)
3. warlords who run the country but closed regime that doesn’t have the same democratic freedoms in the middle (pakistan) self
4. open regime with low state capacity--Iraq
Term
Globalization: Regionalism
Definition
NAFTA, fragmenting of worlds into local blocks, EU tariffs for goods produced outside EU—different kind of grouping

Diminished sovereignty
**After bretton woods after WWII you get regional interests evolving—NAFTA, NATO—you get breakdown of states being the most important
Term
Globalization: Problem of accountability
Definition
problems that affect a lot of countries on a global scale—drug trade, pollution, who do we blame for international problems? People who ship drugs or brokers or those who consume them? Who will really be held accountable?
Term
Globalization: Homogenization
Definition
Everyone to west

hollywood, mcdonalds
Term
Globalization: Modernization
Definition
Global culture – spread unevenly

1. Elite culture – wealthy, politically active/power/influence
2. Two-tiered world – world with internet access/electricity and world without accelerating divisions, distributional struggles
Term
Globalization: Fragmentation
Definition
globalization intensifies differences, brings diverse people into contact
Term
Globalization: Hybridization
Definition
fusion of culture, creating new boundaries
Term
Jus In Bello
Definition
1. Necessity – only use means necessary to achieving victory, goal
2. Proportionality – can just massacre
3. Discrimination – how and who soldiers can kill
4. Mechanism – certain weapons can’t be use, in antiquity couldn’t fight on holy days
Term
Jus Post Bellum
Definition
1. Self-determination – government in power should represent people
2. Legitimacy – people should recognize government as legitimate
3. Civil rights (liberalism) – protection of individual rights
Term
How to distinguish occupation from empire?
Definition
o Nation-building = building institutions, create democracy
o Occupations = peace keeping, occupy without inferring in political institutions
Term
What makes Occupations succeed or fail?
Definition
 Large Troops might aggravate native people more
 Money: how much is enough? Open-ended commitment…as many as it takes… o_O
o Exhaustion – people tired of war, don’t have stomach to take up arms
o Cultural similarity: Some sort of homogeneity or connection between occupier and occupyee
o Good intelligence
o Spoilers – groups that don’t like way occupation is unfolding
Term
What is a spoiler?

Limited Spoiler?

Total Spoiler?
Definition
 Total spoilers – peacekeeping that would NEVER reconcile the peace process
 Limited spoilers – don’t like way things are going but have limited aims that are points of compromise
Term
MAD
Definition
MAD – mutually assured destruction in Cold War
Term
Decapitation Strikes
Definition
take out communication and intelligence sites and political leadership;
Term
SALT
Definition
o Strategic arms limitation treaty
o Anti-ballistic missiles
o I. 1970’s
o II 1970’s
Term
START treaties
Definition
strategic arms reduction treaty
Term
NPT
Definition
Nuclear non-Proliferation Treaty

five world powers, US England, France, Russia and China
o Nuclear proliferation treaty 1968
Term
Vertical Profileration
Definition
development of new kinds of weapons
Term
Horizontal Proliferation
Definition
spread of already developed weapons
Term
Weapons “Taboo"
Definition
some weapons “inappropriate” to use
Term
Diff b/c counterforce and countervalue
Definition
Counterforce (target military) and Countervalue (nonmilitary)
Term
Prospect Theory
Definition
people tend to do more to recoup losses than for original gains—go to gamble and be willing to risk more to recoup losses, willing to risk less for gains in the first place—you think that a particular piece of territory belongs to you and you are willing to risk a lot more to get it back—Israel/Palestine—hapsburg empire-willing to make risks to get territory back and not loose territory-wasn’t willing to do the same to get new territory (1st level analysis, how do leaders think)
Term
Varieties of terrorism
Definition
 Discrete violence – discriminate killing
 Mass violence – INdiscriminate killing
 Suicide terrorism
Term
Terrorism: Causes
Definition
 Power asymmetries – (Israel vs Hezbollah)
 Vulnerability – rational actors may adopt terrorism when don’t have means or may think they may be successful
Term
Movement life cycles
Definition
1. Start off political lobbying
2. Over time…abortion still happening
3. some segment radicalizes to get people to stop “killing babies”
4. radicalizes more subgroup of subgroup…
5. terrorism as method
Term
“New Paradigm” Terrorism
Definition
emergence of terrorists willing to us WMD
Term
Rwanda Crisis: Levels of Analysis
Definition
level 1-individual-personalities and inter govt politics, congressional elections
level 2-beauracry—how reluctant the US was, militaries within specific countries, Belgian groups didn’t want to move in
level 3-state—political culture-1994 we just won the gulf war we don’t know what to do yet—not another somalia
level 4-international
wasn’t of key strategic importance, (realist perspective)
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