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📖 Core Concepts Foreign policy: The set of strategies and actions a state uses to interact with other states, unions, and international entities. Primary objectives: Defense & security – protect the nation, form alliances, use soft power. Economic – trade deals, aid, import‑export management to boost national wealth. Humanitarian/Internationalist – protect vulnerable populations, provide aid, uphold “responsibility to protect.” Power & national capabilities: Super‑power – can project power worldwide. Great / middle power – moderate global influence. Small power – limited resources, often rely on multilateral institutions. Form of government influences: Democracies – public opinion & representation shape policy; tend toward lower war propensity with other democracies. Autocracies/Dictatorships – policy may reflect the ruler’s personal preferences. Analytical models of decision‑making: Rational actor model – the state acts as a unitary, utility‑maximizing decision maker. Government bargaining model – competing agencies or actors negotiate internally. Organizational process model – bureaucratic routines and standard operating procedures drive outcomes. Key concepts: Alliances – formal mutual‑defense or support pacts. Balance of power – no single state can dominate because others counterbalance it. Diplomacy – negotiation and relationship management between states. Intergovernmental organizations (IGOs) – institutions created by multiple states for common goals. IR theory frameworks – realism, liberalism, constructivism explain state interactions. 📌 Must Remember Foreign policy objectives are defense/security, economic, and humanitarian. Power tier matters: super‑powers → global reach; great/middle → regional influence; small → multilateral reliance. Democracies → public opinion matters; autocracies → leader’s will dominates. Rational actor = unitary, interest‑maximizing; bargaining = internal competition; organizational = bureaucratic inertia. Balance of power ≠ alliance; it is a systemic condition preventing domination. IGOs are tools for small powers to amplify influence. 🔄 Key Processes Policy formulation (Rational Actor) Identify national interest → evaluate options → select option that maximizes utility → implement. Government Bargaining Identify relevant agencies (e.g., State Dept., Defense, Treasury). Each proposes preferences → negotiate trade‑offs → reach a coalition agreement → policy output. Organizational Process Issue arises → standard operating procedure (SOP) of the responsible bureau is triggered → routine output is produced → limited revision unless crisis occurs. 🔍 Key Comparisons Democracy vs Autocracy Decision input: public opinion & elections vs. single‑leader preference. Conflict propensity: lower with other democracies vs. higher in autocratic rivalries. Rational Actor vs Bargaining vs Organizational Assumption: unified utility maximizer vs. fragmented interest groups vs. procedural inertia. Predictive strength: strategic level vs. policy detail vs. day‑to‑day actions. Balance of Power vs Alliance Scope: system‑wide equilibrium vs. bilateral/multilateral pact. Goal: prevent domination vs. provide security guarantee. ⚠️ Common Misunderstandings “All alliances create a balance of power.” → Alliances are tools; a balance exists only when no single bloc can dominate. “Small powers have no influence.” → They leverage IGOs and normative power to shape outcomes. “States always act rationally.” → Bureaucratic routines and internal bargaining often produce sub‑optimal choices. 🧠 Mental Models / Intuition “Foreign policy as a kitchen” – the state is the chef (rational actor), the sous‑chefs (agencies) argue over recipes, and the kitchen’s built‑in appliances (bureaucratic SOPs) dictate what actually gets cooked. “Power tier ladder” – picture three rungs (super, great/middle, small); each rung determines the height of the view (global vs. regional vs. multilateral). 🚩 Exceptions & Edge Cases Small powers may lead IGOs (e.g., Norway in peace negotiations) despite limited material power. Democratic peace holds mainly for mature democracies; transitional democracies can behave like autocracies. Rational actor assumptions break down in crisis situations where time pressure forces procedural shortcuts. 📍 When to Use Which Choose Rational Actor when analyzing high‑level strategic choices (e.g., entering a war). Use Government Bargaining for policies that involve multiple ministries (e.g., trade‑security packages). Apply Organizational Process to explain routine diplomatic statements, standard treaty ratifications, or why reforms are slow. 👀 Patterns to Recognize Objective → Tool: Defense → military alliances; Economic → trade agreements; Humanitarian → aid programs/IGOs. Power tier → Strategy: Super‑power → unilateral action or global coalition; Small power → multilateral diplomacy. Model cue words: “maximizes interests” → rational actor; “competing interests” → bargaining; “standard procedures” → organizational. 🗂️ Exam Traps Confusing “balance of power” with “alliance” – answer choices may list an alliance as the balancing mechanism; the correct answer emphasizes systemic counter‑weighting. Attributing policy solely to regime type – a question might link a humanitarian program to a democracy, but autocratic states also deploy soft power for legitimacy. Assuming rationality in every decision – traps will present a perfectly logical cost‑benefit scenario; the correct answer often points to bureaucratic inertia or internal bargaining. Over‑generalizing small‑power behavior – a distractor may claim small states never use force; reality: they can employ niche coercive tools (e.g., cyber).
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