Neorealism(Waltz)
Offensive Realism(Mearsheimer)
International Relations Theory of War(Israeli)
Possible International Systems
•
Multipolar
Bipolar
•
Balanced Multipolar and Unbalanced Multipolar
Bipolar
•
Multipolar
Bipolar
Unipolar
Order Principles Controlling the International System
In an international system, there is a sole transhistorical order principle,
anarchy
,
which dictates to the players to take two main courses of action:
•
Balancing
Bandwagoning
In an international system, there is a sole transhistorical order principle,
anarchy
, which
dictates to the players to take two main courses of action:
•
Buck-passing
in multipolar
systems
Balancing
in bipolar systems
In an international system, there are two transhistorical order principles:
•
Anarchy
, in the sense of the absence of
a common regime, leads the system to spur the players, primarily the polar powers constituting it, to tend always to expansion
or formation of a hegemony for
them to head
Homeostasis
, in the sense of a property of
the system that resists change, leads the system to
dictate
to players, primarily
the polar powers constituting it, to tend always to
stagnation
and preserve the
system in its existing state
Direction of Influence of the Analysis Units on the Outcomes in the System
Bottom up (inductive).Analysis units at the state level—
balancing
and
bandwagoning
—are what affect
the outcomes at the system level
Bottom up (inductive).Analysis units at the state level—
balancing
and
buck-
passing
—are what affect the
outcomes at the system level
Top down (deductive).An analysis unit at the system level—polarity of the system
—is what affects the
two international outcomes: systemic and intrasystemic
Table 2.4Neorealism, Offensive Realism, and the
International Relations Theory of War