Buzan and Little: Chapters 8 & 9

Similar documents
Marxism. This image is in the public domain. Source: Wikimedia Commons.

Global Political Economy

U.S. National Elections

Lecture/Tutorial/Reading notes

Campaign Finance Fall 2016

If we stopped imprisoning our emotions in industrially manufactured profit centers, desire could become an engine of social transformation.

Curriculum Scope & Sequence

14.54 International Trade Lecture 23: Factor Mobility (I) Labor Migration

My contribution to this volume on diplomacy and intercultural communication

Groups. Chapter Four

INSTITUTIONS MATTER (revision 3/28/94)

Brunswick School Department: Grades 9-12

Origins and Development of Congress Spring 2016

Political Science Introduction to American Politics

DEPARTMENT OF POLITICAL SCIENCE

Directives Period Topics Topic breakdowns

Bachelor of Arts in Global Studies

Classical Civilization: China

14.54 International Trade Lecture 22: Trade Policy (III)

Classical China. Qin and Han Dynasties

Bachelor of Arts in History

Introduction to International Relations

Sustainability in Engineering. Systems. ESD.83 Discussion. Lecture 12

Congressional Candidates /252 Fall 2016

History overview - Individuals and societies

SOCIAL STUDIES. Time, Continuity and Change

14.770: Introduction to Political Economy Lectures 4 and 5: Voting and Political Decisions in Practice

The Comparison of the Position of Human Rights in Liberalism Theory and English School of International Relations

u.s. policies. a. Were the policy's effects on the USA and U.S. interests good or bad? Consider four U.S. interests:

Routledge Handbooks Spring 2014 Dawson Promotion - 15% Discount

Thomas Hobbes: Does Might Make Right?

Rise Great Leader Achievements Fall

GCS Concentration Course Lists. (Summer 2015, subject to continual updating)

the two explanatory forces of interests and ideas. All of the readings draw at least in part on ideas as

Feng Zhang, Chinese Hegemony: Grand Strategy and International Institutions in East Asian History

Asian Security Challenges

POLITICAL SCIENCE (POLS)

POLITICAL SCIENCE (PS)

Social Studies World History Classical Civilizations and Empires 1000 B.C. to 1450 A.D.

Bachelor of Social Sciences (Honours)

In Neustadt s seminal work on the presidency (1960), he claims that

SOCIAL AND CULTURAL ANTHROPOLOGY

PRESENTATION: THE FOREIGN POLICY OF BRAZIL

Bachelor of Arts in Political Science

The University of North Carolina at Pembroke Academic Catalog

Making Public Policy. Lecture 19. edmp: / / 21A.341/

On Inequality Traps and Development Policy. Findings

POLI 111: INTRODUCTION TO THE STUDY OF POLITICAL SCIENCE

POLITICAL SCIENCE (PS)

Defense Cooperation: The South American Experience *

Institutional Economics The Economics of Ecological Economics!

In addition to Greece, a significant classical civilization was ancient Rome. Its history from 500 B.C A.D is known as the Classical Era.

ECO/SNY 128 Spring Lecture 1 Modernity and Civilizations. M. Aykut Attar

1. What is political culture? Cite examples of political cultures other than our own.

Interest Groups. AP United States Government Spring, 2017

! Elements of Worldview

Fall 2015 INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS in the CYBER AGE. The Course is in Three Parts

The Craft of Lobbying: A practitioners View. Natko Vlahović Croatian Chamber of Crafts AEGEE 26/7/2007

Divergences in Abortion Opinions across Demographics. its divisiveness preceded the sweeping 1973 Roe v. Wade decision protecting abortion rights

Understand the basic concepts of European Union Law and differentiate the EU legal order from international and national legal orders.

SS: Social Sciences. SS 131 General Psychology 3 credits; 3 lecture hours

Diversity and American Society

In search of moral leadership

I.S.P.I.C.E. Concepts

Legal development: getting from here to there

It is a great honor and a pleasure to be the inaugural Upton Scholar. During

Department of Political Science

Political Science Introduction to American Politics

English and the Brain Drain: an Uncertain Relationship

Brunswick School Department: Grades 9-12

The Legitimacy of Humanitarian Intervention in International Society of The 21 st Century

POLITICS AND GOVERNMENT (POL)

Government (GOV) & International Affairs (INTL)

Guidance Notes : Tutorial Preferences CUA Oxford Honors Program - OPUS - STUDY IN OXFORD

War & Peace & War The Life Cycles of Imperial Nations, Chapters 4-6 by Walkiria Walka Quiroga. Chapter 4 Asabiya in the Desert

II. Thematic Learning Objectives

POLITICS AND INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS

GOVT-GOVERNMENT (GOVT)

Political Science Courses-1. American Politics

Issue Papers prepared by the Government of Japan

Political Violence Response Paper. The five works this week look at political violence from two different perspectives the

Political Science Introduction to American Politics

Bernard Guerin Psychology Department, University of South Australia, Australia

Time, history, and international law. JUFN29, spring 2016 Faculty of Law, Lund University Matilda Arvidsson

PART I: OUR CONVERGING CRISES

Waltz s book belongs to an important style of theorizing, in which far-reaching. conclusions about a domain in this case, the domain of international

SOCIAL STUDIES 8 COURSE OUTLINE WORLD CIVILIZATIONS

Winter 2015 Elective Course Schedule and Descriptions Michigan Winter Term 2015 (same as what UCDC calls Spring 2015 )

GEOG 4712: Political Geography. Lecture 17: World Systems Analysis

Immigration, Politics and Elections. MIT Black Matters class , Spring 2017

PLSC 408 /EP&E400/ MGT 660: Capitalism as a Political Order Yale University, Fall Wednesday 3:30-5:20pm, RKZ 102

Department of Political Science

A Plan for the Nations Step Four

Miracle Obeta, M.A. Miami University, Oxford, Ohio. Reviewed

Brunswick High School Social Studies World History I - Grade 9 UNIT 6: The Golden Age of Empires

Conclusion: Eleanor Roosevelt and Her Transatlantic Quest for Equality and Freedom

ECC Recommendation (16)02

Maureen Molloy and Wendy Larner

Semiotics of culture and communication

A brief history. Political Climate of the 1950s. World events. Liberal or Conservative? World War II and the Cold War

Transcription:

1 Buzan and Little: Chapters 8 & 9

Discussion What changes in units characterize the shift from the pre-international world to the ancient/classical world? 2

Ancient and Classical Units Inside/Outside structure Empires, City-states, and Barbarians Political units coexist and are interrelated 3

City-States Changes in control of land Concentrations of wealth = more conflict City-states politically multifaceted Autonomous Empires City-Leagues 4

Empires Four Keys of stable empires Ideology Bureaucracy Administrative techniques Merchant class Empires are flexible 5

Empires 6 Buzan, Barry, and Richard Little. International Systems in World History: Remaking the Study of International Relations. Oxford University Press, 2000. Oxford University Press. All rights reserved. This content is excluded from our Creative Commons license. For more information, see https://ocw.mit.edu/help/faq-fair-use/.

Empires 7 Buzan, Barry, and Richard Little. International Systems in World History: Remaking the Study of International Relations. Oxford University Press, 2000. Oxford University Press. All rights reserved. This content is excluded from our Creative Commons license. For more information, see https://ocw.mit.edu/help/faq-fair-use/.

Empires Think about the bands of control in an empire as shifting balances between the different aspects of interaction capacity As social and physical technology improves, the constraint of geography diminishes Space of possible direct control expands. BUT Nature of political relations NOT dictated by IC 8

Civilizations Changes in world society Thicker More extensive than in the past Long-lived 9 Image courtesy of Yasin Hassan on flickr. License CC BY.

Nomads Nomadic tribes and empires More ephemeral, less stable Depended on changes in physical (as opposed to social) technology At the same time, more capable 10

Discussion What changes in interaction capacity marked the transition to the ancient/classical period? 11

Ancient and Classical Interaction Capacity Physical technologies Wheel Domestication of animals Roads and canals Ships Social technologies Writing Religion Legal systems Money Lingua franca Diplomacy Trade diasporas 12

Questions for thought What distinguishes City-states and Empires from previous forms of political organization? What are the four keys to a stable empire? What do the authors mean when they refer to multiple international systems? How do modern theoretical approaches depend on the social technologies developed by ancient and classical empires? What were the physical and social technologies that contributed to the rise and perpetuation of empires? Which (physical or social) played a more significant role? What effect did writing have on the evolution of social units (think beyond the text!)? What is the relationship between the various social technologies? How might the development of one influence the development of others (remember, we are talking about social systems here; these things rarely occur independently)? How was interaction capacity geography dependent? 13

MIT OpenCourseWare https://ocw.mit.edu/ 17.41 Introduction to International Relations Spring 2018 For information about citing these materials or our Terms of Use, visit: https://ocw.mit.edu/terms.