Social Constructivism Flashcards

1
Q

Constructivism

A
  • key in understanding how people make choices is in the social setting they are coming from
  • preoccupation with materialism (in previous schools of thought) blinded scholars for importance of culture, ideas, values, and norms (=> provide meanings in everyday social life)
  • actors act rationally when they behave according to accepted rules, norms and ideas in social setting they operate
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2
Q

Social setting

A
  • e.g. democracy or totalitarian regime
  • established rules and norms that inform people on the social meanings attached to objects and practices
  • what is meaningful/important in society and how to behave according to it (elections, traditions, culture, symbols, common past)
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3
Q

Role of social interaction

A
  • Actors acquire their norms and ideas through socialisation and social interaction which is performed in particular social setting
  • crucial for reinvention and development of social meanings and actors
  • SC doesn’t object material reality but observes its meaning and construction
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4
Q

Ideational structures

A

= ideas, values, norms, rules
- as important as material ones in shaping identity and interests of political actors
- the building blocks of any given socio-political and cultural environment
- provide the meaning of what is considered acceptable and hence legitimate action

E.g.
- general: principles of democracy, HR discourse in UN/EU, enviro responsibility and sustainability
- context specific: code of conduct in diplomacy, inter- and intra-institutional coordination and coherence in the EU, professional rules of conduct at uni etc

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5
Q

Identity, interest, action

A

Ideational structures condition actors’ identities -> this informs their interests -> and in turn influence their actions

  • actors’ identity, interest and action are products of specific Ideational structures
  • malleable - thanks to new ideas, new knowledge, repeated interaction and new social agreements
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6
Q

Mainstream constructivism

A
  • thinker - Alexander Wendt
  • world has both materialist and Ideational aspects
  • accepts existence of anarchy, security dilemma etc but holds that their meaning arise and evolve out of social interaction and the ideas we exchange
  • studies the role of social facts defined by social agreements not material values
  • its explanatory theory (wants to describe world as it is)
  • bridge between materialist and Ideational logics
    • what is seen as legitimate action can yield results at lower material cost
    • the more a certain course of action is seen as illegitimate the higher the cost of its implementation
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7
Q

Brute vs social facts

A

Brute facts
- there is snow on the mountain top
Social facts
- money, terrorism, migration, laws
- assume meaning only if we agree on it

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8
Q

Social constructivism vs materialism

A

Materialism
- material objects have direct effects on actors and outcomes, they are unaffected by the ideas people bring to them

Constructivism
- effect of material objects can be understood only through the concepts/ideas defining their meaning
- all meanings are socially constructed + are changing and fluid
- eg sovereignty has changed since treaty of Westphalia (now if a state massively violates HR of its citizens - possibility for international humanitarian intervention => limiting sovereignty of “violator” state)

Eg with nuclear weapons
- realism - actors respond directly to material incentives
- constructivism - meaning and interpretation always mediate between material forces and social actors (otherwise we wouldn’t worry about 15 North Korea nuclear weapons over 215 UK’s — based on interpretations of historical knowledge, political rhetoric, behaviour over time and existing interactions)

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9
Q

Security dilemma and war are not forgone conclusions

A
  • interaction may lead to mutual understanding of each side’s interests and underlying identity
    • may ease tensions so that potential security dilemma is mitigated and conflict de-escalated
  • language is important (one word can change the whole understanding of the whole situation and lead to unnecessary actions)
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10
Q

Concepts of SC

A
  • social setting - what influences the behaviour and structure of the behaviour (not materialistic reasons)
  • identity - what shapes interests and therefore shapes action
  • rational behaviour - related to social setting - actors need to act according the norms of the setting

2 logics
- materialist - based on cost-benefit, pros and cons, used by realism and liberalism
- ideational - following norms and social structures, used by constructivism

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11
Q

Holism vs idealism

A

Holism - countries can’t be split apart into other units -> interconnected actors in global politics
Idealism - ideas are social thus everyone can interpret the same thing in different way

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12
Q

3 steps in creating norms

A
  1. Norm emergence - it gets recognised
  2. Norm cascade - norm spreads through population
  3. Norm of internalisation - international rule becomes legitimate and everyone knows about it (eg feminism, LGBT)
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13
Q

3 types of anarchy according to SC

A
  1. Hobbesian = realist - actors are seen as enemies + survival depends on power
    - security - increasing military power by balance of power (military alliances)
  2. Lockean = liberal - states are rivals (less competitive), respect sovereignty
    - security - engage by negotiation, there is competition but not war
  3. Kantian = liberal - disputes settled amicably, they are friends, in case of a war by third party they respond collectively
    - security - diplomacy by negotiation
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