Transcription of CONSTRUCTIVISM - Northwestern University
1 17-Smit-Snidal-c17 OUP218-Reus-Smit(Typeset by Spi, Delhi)298of316 January18,2008 18:41chapter hurdThebasic insight behind the constructivist approach can be understood by un-packing a quick observation made by Alexander Wendt. He says that 500 Britishnuclear weapons are less threatening to the United States than5 North Koreannuclear weapons (Wendt1995,73). In this little observation are found traces ofthe features that distinguish CONSTRUCTIVISM from other approaches to internationalrelations, including its critique of materialism, its emphasis on the social construc-tion of interests, its relationship between structures and agents, and its multiplelogics of anarchy. On its surface, the empirical puzzle of the threat embodied byNorth Korean missiles is easy to explain: as Wendt (1995,73) says, the British arefriends and the North Koreans are not.
2 This of course begs an understanding ofthe categories of friend and enemy, and it is through this opening that Wendtand other constructivists have addressed both important substantive aspects ofinternational relations (for instance, how do states come to see others as friendsand as enemies? ) and the philosophical background it presupposes (for instance, how can we study social and relational phenomena like friend and enemy ininternational relations? ).This chapter examines the features that distinguish CONSTRUCTIVISM from otherapproaches to international relations and then looks at some controversies withinconstructivist scholarship today and between constructivists and others. There aremany excellent short histories of the constructivist school ( , Barnett2005;Reus-Smit2005), and my goal is to avoid repeating them and instead explain what Ithink the term CONSTRUCTIVISM means in international relations.
3 To do so, I alsoFor very useful comments on earlier drafts, I thank Karen Alter, Chris Reus-Smit, and (Typeset by Spi, Delhi)299of316 January18,2008 18:41constructivism 299define other approaches, including materialism, realism, and rationalism, in orderto show how CONSTRUCTIVISM differs. This involves some controversy, because thelines that separate them are not at all clear. In what follows, I take realism to be atits core about materialism (that is, the theory that states respond tomaterialneeds,incentives, and power) and rationalism to be about instrumentalism (that is, thetheory that states pursue individual advantage by calculating costs and benefits). CONSTRUCTIVISM , by contrast, emphasizes thesocialandrelationalconstruction ofwhat states are and what they want. All these approaches might be used to focuson power politics, cooperation, conflict,or any other substantive phenomena.
4 It is,therefore, wrong to associate a substantive interest in power exclusively with real-ism, because all the paradigms of international relations are interested in power,as either motivation, cause, or effect. I differentiate realism as a particular theoryaboutmaterialpower in international relations, in contrast with CONSTRUCTIVISM semphasis on the social meaning attached to objects or asking for an explanation of the importance in world politics of social conceptslike friend and enemy, the constructivist challenge opened two paths. One was moreempirical and used the tools provided by Friedrich Kratochwil (1989), NicholasOnuf (1989), Wendt (1992), and other constructivists to explain anomalies of otherapproaches. The other was more conceptual and concerned how these social con-cepts might work in the world and how they could be studied and used in CONSTRUCTIVISM s starting point as a reaction to materialism, individualism,and rationalism, the empirical branch of research was like a downstream flow; itapplied the insights of CONSTRUCTIVISM to understand interesting patterns, behaviors,and puzzles.
5 The philosophic branch went upstream it sought to understand thereasons for, and implications of, the differences between CONSTRUCTIVISM and otherapproaches to social section outlines four features of CONSTRUCTIVISM that distinguish it from otherapproaches and show how CONSTRUCTIVISM addresses both philosophical and em-pirical issues that were inaccessible through the prevailing models of internationalrelations in the1980s. The four are not necessarily exclusive to CONSTRUCTIVISM ,but each has a constructivist variant that is distinct from both the materialism of1J. Samuel Barkin (2003), by contrast, defines realism as a concern with power and then notesthat this is consistent with social construction. I agree that classical realists incorporated non-materialforces, but by my definition that makes them less realist.
6 17-Smit-Snidal-c17 OUP218-Reus-Smit(Typeset by Spi, Delhi)300of316 January18,2008 18:41300 ian hurdrealism and the rationalism of neoliberalism, and carries distinct implications forhow world politics is Alternative to MaterialismThe original insight behind CONSTRUCTIVISM is that meaning is socially constructed. This is also the source of the label CONSTRUCTIVISM . Wendt (1992,396 7)says a fundamental principle of constructivist social theory is that people act towardobjects, including other actors, on the basis of the meanings that the objects havefor them. 2In a socially constructed world, the existence of patterns, cause-and-effect relationships, and even states themselves depends on webs of meaning andpractices that constitute them ( , Kratochwil1989). These meanings and practicesmight sometimes be relatively stable, but they are never fixed and should not bemistaken for permanent ideas and practices vary over time or space,patterns that once looked solid and predictable may change as well.
7 For instance,sovereignty is a social institution in the sense that a state can be sovereign onlywhen it is seen by people and other states as a corporate actor with rights andobligations over territory and citizens (and they act accordingly). The practice ofsovereignty has changed over time, and the powers and identities of actually existingstates have changed as well (see, , the essays in Biersteker and Weber1996). Totake a more concrete example, since1945the idea has spread that massive humanrights violations by states against their citizens may legally justify internationalintervention. Sovereignty is thereby changing, and the autonomy of some rulers(that is, rights violators) is reduced while that of others (potential interveners) isincreased. Sovereignty is an important organizing force in international relationsthat rests on the shared ideas of people and the practices people engage contrasting approach to social construction in world politics is the positionknown as materialism, which suggests that material objects (bombs, mountains,people, oil, and so on) have a direct effectonoutcomesthatisunmediatedbytheide as people bring to them.
8 Neorealism and neoliberalism are explicitly materialistapproaches to world politics. They seek to explain international patterns and be-haviors as the result of purely material forces, particularly the military hardware,strategic resources, and money that they see as constituting power. For example,John Mearsheimer (1995,91) argues that the distribution of material capabilitiesamong states is the key factor for understanding world politics. Among neoliberals,Joshua Goldstein and Robert Keohane (1994) identify states material interests asdistinct from people s ideas about the world, and their research on the causal effectsof ideas uses as its baseline the materialist hypothesis. Neorealists and neoliberals in2 This insight appears also in the work of Hedley Bull and the English School as well as of someclassical is the mistake of reification.
9 17-Smit-Snidal-c17 OUP218-Reus-Smit(Typeset by Spi, Delhi)301of316 January18,2008 18:41constructivism 301the1980s shared a commitment to materialism in which socially mediated beliefswere not important autonomous forces, and they argued among themselves overthe likely implications of such a world for patterns such as cooperation, institution-making, arms races, and balancing (see, , the essays in Baldwin1993).The ideas that give shape to international politics are more than just the beliefsof individuals. They include ideas that are intersubjective (that is, shared amongpeople) and institutionalized (that is, expressed as practices and identities). In-tersubjective and institutionalized formsof ideas are not reducible to individualminds (Wendt1999, ;Legro2005,5). Jeffrey Legro (2005,6) summarizes theconstructivist understanding of ideas: ideas are not so much mental as symbolicand organizational; they are embedded not only in human brains but also inthe collective memories, government procedures, educational systems, and therhetoric of statecraft.
10 This makes it clear that the constructivist insight is notthat we replace brute materialism with brute idealism (cf. Palan2000). Rather, CONSTRUCTIVISM suggests that material forces must be understood through the socialconcepts that define their meaning for human purely materialist approach has difficulty explaining why the USA shouldsee British missiles as any less threatening than North Korean missiles. The self-evident friendliness of Britain toward the USA as compared to the apparent hos-tility of North Korea is not self-evident from a purely material perspective. After all,the physical consequences of an attack by the nuclear weapons of either countrywould be devastating. The brute material threat to the USA posed by a Britishnuclear weapon is at least comparable to, and probably much greater than, that ofa North Korean weapon.