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INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS THEORY AND THE ARCTIC. LECTURE AIMS. Summarise the different international relations theories Provide some illustrations of how they might inform our understanding of the Arctic Consider their strengths and weaknesses. WHAT IS IR THEORY FOR?.
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LECTURE AIMS Summarise the different international relations theories Provide some illustrations of how they might inform our understanding of the Arctic Consider their strengths and weaknesses
WHAT IS IR THEORY FOR? Means of understanding and interpreting events Simplification of reality Prediction? Not really a guide to action
THE BASICS Liberalism Optimistic, harmony of interests, progress possible Realism Pessimistic, war, repeated behaviour inescapable
CLASSICAL REALISM Pessimistic view of human nature States system is anarchical War could happen at any time Security is a central concern Power a means to achieve it Balance of power key mechanism
NEO-REALISM Scientific theory of international relations Systemic level theory States are rational, unitary actors in anarchical system. Cannot trust each other Distribution of power is key to predicting outcomes
REALISM Repetitive behaviour expected Balancing Alliances Security dilemma Arms races War
REALISM International law is epiphenomenal Created and enforced by powerful states in their interests Morality is cheap-talk International institutions have no effect
LIBERALISM Cooperation is possible in international relations States are not the only important actors Regime-type is important More of a role for institutions and rules Economic interdependence can lead to peace Democratic peace – a law of IR
DEMOCRATIC PEACE Institutional explanation Checks and balances People risk-averse, prefer peace Normative explanation Democracies externalise internal decision-making processes and preferences
LIBERALISM Neo-liberalism Same assumptions as realism, different conclusions Provide rules and norms Institutions can prevent cheating Reduce transaction costs Provide forums Enable issue-linkage States take long-term view of self-interests International institutional order is sticky
INSTITUTIONS IN THE ARCTIC Law of the Sea - Recognized by all major Arctic powers and non-Arctic States Arctic Council - Membership of 8 Arctic States and participation from Indigenous groups
CONSTRUCTIVISM International politics are socially constructed Ideational variables are key Norms regulate and constitute Standards of appropriateness condition behaviour Anarchy is what states make of it Examine discourses and framing
CONSTRUCTIVISM Wendt's Three Cultures of Anarchy - Hobbesian - Lockean - Kantian
CONSTRUCTIVISM Security communities possible - States no longer contemplate war as a serious possibility Identity and difference matter - There are “in-groups” and “out-groups” Legitimacy is a key variable and states care about reputation but not for material reasons
ISSUES: TERRITORIAL CONFLICTS Territorial issues a leading historical cause of war War has been more likely between states if they have a territorial dispute Territorial wars are fought harder, longer and with more casualties
CHANGING CONSTRUCTION OF TERRITORY Territory as personal possession of monarch - Sale, exchange, compensation, conquest. Romantic period saw it linked to people Self-determination and territory as a home-land Conquest now seen as inappropriate
TERRITORIAL INTEGRITY Territorial aggrandizement and the forceful alteration of international boundaries now illegitimate "The society of states has largely eliminated what scholars have identified as the major source of enduring rivalries and the frequency and intensity of warfare." Mark Zacher No country is openly questioning the territorial order in the Arctic, but it is jurisdiction at sea that has been of concern
REALISM AT SEA The ocean is not a part of the state Geopolitical discourse frames state as object of security Realism does not have much to say about offshore jurisdiction
SECURITY AND THE SEA Major security concerns: Freedom of navigation and over-flight The bargain in UNCLOS Territorial Sea Ships and other offshore installations What about maritime zones and their boundaries?
TERRITORIAL INTEGRITY AND THE SEA Ocean is not territory beyond the territorial sea Freedom of navigation and limited sovereign rights No maritime boundaries in many places Ocean and land are very different social, political and economic spaces
TERRITORIAL INTEGRITY AND THE SEA Basis of land norm: Instrumental – prevention of conflict Ethical – self-determination At sea: No history of territorial conflict No population
TERRITORIAL INTEGRITY AND THE SEA Ocean a very different social space to land Less salient politically? Steinberg – great void, force-field and territorial constructions Construction coming under stress? Psycho-legal boundaries
TERRITORIAL INTEGRITY AND THE SEA States have complied with UNCLOS Maritime boundaries very stable No conquest at sea States use law to justify their boundary claims
TERRITORIAL INTEGRITY AND THE SEA Territorial sea based in security - Decline of the canon-shot rule Status as a buffer to primary security referent of the state Given meaning by its relationship to state What about other zones?
TERRITORIAL INTEGRITY AND THE SEA Ocean space as economic/instrumental Exclusive Economic Zone Joint development arrangements
TERRITORIAL INTEGRITY AND THE SEA Continental shelf - Natural prolongation - Annexation - Arvid Pardo's warning EEZ/fisheries - Conservation and an ecological space - Territorial space Disorder concerns relating to both
TERRITORIAL INTEGRITY AND THE ARCTIC "This isn't the 15th Century, you can't go around the world and just plant flags and say 'We're claiming this territory'," - Peter MacKay, Minister of Foreign Affairs