Realism
Sacred Space & Time
Democratic Peace Theory
Civil Military Relations
Soft Power & Territorial Disputes
100

What is the difference between offensive vs. defensive realism?

OR: All states are revisionist, states have an insatiable appetite for power

DR: States just want to preserve the balance of power; once power is balanced, they are restrained

100

What are the four effects of sacred time according to Ron?

Vulnerability, motivation, constraint, and outrage

100

What is DPT?

Seeks to explain the near-complete absence of war within democratic dyads; the theory argues that this pattern is caused by the democratic character of the states involved

100

What is meant by the "delicate balance" of military power?

The military is strong enough to protect the state against outsiders but not too strong to impose its will over the state.

100

What is soft power?

the ability to co-opt rather than coerce. It involves shaping the preferences of others through appeal and attraction. Soft power is non-coercive, using culture, political values, and foreign policies to enact change

200

What is the difference between balancing vs. bandwagoning? And how does each relate to OR and DR?

DR: Hegemons are “bad” → balance → ultimate hegemonic decline

OR: Bandwagon → join and become more powerful

200

What are the three necessary and sufficient conditions for indivisibility of sacred space?

(i) Integrity (ii) Clear and unambiguous boundaries (iii) Non-fungibility

200

T or F: According to the DPT, there is a positive linear relationship between the "democratic-ness" of states and their tendency not to go to wars.

FALSE

200

What are TWO of the many ways (six mentioned in lecture) by which societies try to control the military?

Limiting state investments in security

Creating competing military organizations

Limiting the size of the military

Creating a representative military

Focusing the military on narrow technical expertise

Creating “citizen soldiers” / civic education - allegiance to the constitution

200

List and describe two reasons why territory is valuable to people/states.

From most tangible to least tangible: resources, strategic value, identity, and reputation
300

When do states balance vs. bandwagon?

States balance to preserve their own influence and values

States bandwagon to free ride

300

What is meant by "necessary" and "sufficient" conditions (for sacred space)?

Necessary: Must be included for the event to occur, but can be insufficient to trigger the event

Sufficient: Can trigger the event, but technically doesn't imply necessity (can be excluded)

300

The three explanations for the DPT theory are institutional, cultural, and rationalist. What does each mean?

1. Citizens restrain leaders from going to war by means of democratic institutions (laws, vote, congress, lobbies, media)

2. Citizens in democracies recognize and respect the liberty of citizens in fellow democracies

3. Wars occur when states choose to misrepresent their capabilities or resolve; in democracies, the media restrains leaders from lying

300

What are praetorian states?

A strong military influence over the state but not a complete take-over of the government; indirect rule

300

According to Joseph Nye, why are democracies better suited to employ soft power?

Public diplomacy: NOT diplomacy between states/elites, but rather communicate between public 1 and state 2 (vice versa) or between public 1 and public 2

400

What is the difference between preventive war vs. preemptive strike? AND, what do defensive realists have to say about preventive wars (specifically, who is to blame, and when is war most likely)?

Difference: "Imminence"

DR: Defensive Realists blame the hegemon for starting the war, not the revisionist state, because war is most likely when a hegemon declines in power and a revisionist state threatens to overtake; the hegemon feels that war now is better than waiting.

400

Leaders are most likely to time their attacks with sacred dates in the religious calendar under three conditions according to Ron. What are they?

When conflict occurs across religious divides, when the sacred day is unambiguous in significance and meaning, and when rituals connected to that day will undermine an opponents’ military effectiveness.

400

Come up to the board, and graph the empirically more  accurate relationship between the "democratic-ness" of states and their tendency not to go to war (specify and label the axes!).

See the board

400

Summarize Lutterbeck's main argument/theory regarding the civil-military relationship. ALSO, explain how tribalism/cronyism and meritocracy relate to the theory.

Low-Level of Institutionalization + Weak Link to Society = Resistance to Pro-Reform Movements

High-Level of Institutionalization + Strong Link to Society = Openness to Pro-Reform Movements

Tribalism/cronyism = low-level of institutionalization

Meritocracy = high-level of institutionalization

400

List and describe two ways how territorial disputes can escalate into war.

Misperception

Other Psychological Reasons - loss aversion/sunk cost

SOPs - accidental clashes/interaction

Social Identity Theory

Authoritarianism - scapegoating adversary for domestic control

500

List an example of a revisionist state and the corresponding balancing coalition in WANA, AND the specific corresponding historical period.

1940-1960 Israel V Egypt, Syria, Jordan, Iraq, Saudi
1960-1980 Egypt V Jordan, Iraq, Israel
1980-1990 Iran V Iraq, Egypt, Saudi, Gulf, Israel
1990-2000 Iraq V Iran, Egypt, Saudi, Gulf, Israel
2000-now Iran V Iraq, Egypt, Saudi, Gulf, Israel

500

List the five stages/structures of how places become holy/sacred IN ORDER.

Hierophany, Pilgrimage, Shrine, Temple, Mirror Site

500

What are anocracies? How do they challenge the DPT theory? AND WHY are anocracies more susceptible to conflict than autocracies (think John Owen article)?

Anocracies = semi-democracies (states transitioning to democracies)

They challenge the DPT theory as anocracies are the reason why the linear relationship assumption is not observed in real life.

Anocracies are more susceptible to conflict than autocracies because "Politicians, vying for power, appeased domestic hard-liners by resorting to nationalistic appeals that vilified foreigners, and these policies often led to wars that were not in the countries' strategic interests." (Rally-round-the-flag effect)

500

Define "military dictatorships," compare them to praetorian states, AND list two current or historical military dictatorships in WANA.

A military dictatorship, or a military regime, is a type of dictatorship in which power is held by one or more military officers. Military dictatorships are led by either a single military dictator, known as a strongman, or by a council of military officers known as a military junta.

Syria - Assad, Libya - Qaddafi, Iraq - Hussein

500

List all three conditions under which a territorial dispute resolution is likely to occur.

  • The contenders are not enemies

  • The territory has economic value but no strategic value

  • There are no ethnic enclaves on the other side of the border

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