ThisGuyRiteHere Posted April 1, 2013 Posted April 1, 2013 Do you need to learn a language to do IR? I know in comparative it is probably essential to do so, but in IR studying IPE/Conflict between nations, do you need to learn the language for the region you want to study?My language experience is next to nothing..and I am worried
hawkeye78 Posted April 1, 2013 Posted April 1, 2013 (edited) We don't have a language requirement here at Iowa. Being smart on math is helpful though. Edited April 1, 2013 by hawkeye78
catchermiscount Posted April 1, 2013 Posted April 1, 2013 Heck, just knowing most of the capitals would put you ahead most of the conflict folks.
peternewman89 Posted April 1, 2013 Posted April 1, 2013 I'm starting in theory in the fall so different field, but for us there is no language requirement for anyone in the department (methods requirements instead). Β I had a long talk with my advisor during my visit and I'll be learning at least one, probably two languages in the next few years so that I can be a more complete theorist. Β For us though, language is definitely de-emphasized, for all fields. Β Though probably half of the comparitivists are native spanish-speakers, so they've got something down already.
IRToni Posted April 1, 2013 Posted April 1, 2013 I think it depends on what kind of research you want to do and what your ontological/epistemological priors are. If you are doing large-N-quantitative studies, not focusing on specific countries/regions, it might not be necessary. Similarly if your research is closely aligned with neorealism as a theory, since it doesn't focus on specifics. However, if you're thinking of doing small-N case studies involving specific regions/countries, open the "black box" of the state, or are planning to have a strong regional focus, I think learning a language is absolutely essential, also in IR. splinter111 1
ThisGuyRiteHere Posted April 1, 2013 Author Posted April 1, 2013 Any ideas on what books to read for IR or journal articles. Β My intro IR Class, we read the Lord of the Rings and talked about Realism and Idealism :/ that was it.
phdhope2013 Posted April 1, 2013 Posted April 1, 2013 Any ideas on what books to read for IR or journal articles. Β My intro IR Class, we read the Lord of the Rings and talked about Realism and Idealism :/ that was it. Β I am pretty sure if you email the Professors at the school you are attending they will give you the reading list/syllabus to courses you may want to take and use that for any reading you want to do.Β
catchermiscount Posted April 1, 2013 Posted April 1, 2013 Any ideas on what books to read for IR or journal articles. Β My intro IR Class, we read the Lord of the Rings and talked about Realism and Idealism :/ that was it. What kind of work do you intend to do?
ThisGuyRiteHere Posted April 1, 2013 Author Posted April 1, 2013 What kind of work do you intend to do? Β Conflict. I have a basic idea of my other area (IPE).
GopherGrad Posted April 1, 2013 Posted April 1, 2013 Great power type conflict or asymmetrical stuff? I can dump a huge reading list on your for either, but you shouldn't sweat reading a ton this summer or anything.
Dark-Helmed Posted April 1, 2013 Posted April 1, 2013 Conflict. I have a basic idea of my other area (IPE). Β World War Z has a non-trivial amount of IR/conflict themes if you're looking for fun reading that you can count towards your prep.
eponine997 Posted April 1, 2013 Posted April 1, 2013 Any ideas on what books to read for IR or journal articles. Β My intro IR Class, we read the Lord of the Rings and talked about Realism and Idealism :/ that was it. I've got a long list for this, as relating to conflict (though more civil war/comparative than IR). Β PM if you'd like. Β
GopherGrad Posted April 1, 2013 Posted April 1, 2013 The next two posts are from the comps reading list I put together for my MA degree. First international war, second, intra-national. Β International Wars Realism Blainey, Geoffrey: The Causes of War. Brooks, Stephen: βDueling Realismsβ International Organizations Fearon, James: βRationalist Explanations for Warβ International Organization. Mearshimer, John: The Tragedy of Great Power Politics. Wohlforth, William: βRealism and the End of the Cold Warβ International Security. Waltz, Kenneth: Theory of International Politics. Β Β Β Security Dilemmas Fearon, James: βDomestic Political Audiences and the Escalation of International Disputesβ Β Β Β American Political Science Review. Glaser, Charles: Rational Theory of International Politics Jervis, Robert: βCooperation Under the Security Dilemmaβ World Politics. Van Evra, Steven: βOffense, Defense and the Causes of Warβ International Security. Β Β Β Structure and Polarity Duetsch and Singer: βMultipolar Power Systems and International Stabilityβ World Politics Hass, Michael: βInternational Subsystems: Stability and Polarityβ American Political Science Review Nexon, Daniel: βThe Balance of Power in the Balanceβ World Politics Wohlforth, William: βThe Stability of a Unipolar Worldβ International Security. Wohlforth, William: βTesting Balance of Power Theory in World Historyβ European Journal of International Relations. Waltz, Kenneth: βThe Stability of a Bipolar Worldβ Daedalus. Waltz, Kenneth: βStructural Realism after the Cold Warβ International Security. Liberalism and Democratic Peace Β Β Β The Politics of Accountability Doyle, Michael: βThree Pillars of the Liberal Peaceβ American Political Science Review. Finel, Bernard and Lord, Kristin: βThe Surprising Logic of Transparencyβ International Studies Β Β Β Quarterly. Owen, John: βHow Liberalism Produces Democratic Peaceβ International Organization. Weeks, Jessica: βAutocratic Audience Costs: Regime Type and Signaling Resolveβ International Β Β Β Organization. Β Β Β Relations Between Democracies and the Liberal Consensus Downes, Alexander: βHow Smart and Tough Are Democracies? Reassessing Theories of Β Β Β Democratic Victory in Warβ International Security. Doyle, Michael: βLiberalism and World Politicsβ The American Political Science Review. Doyle, Michael: βThree Pillars of the Liberal Peaceβ American Political Science Review. Desch, Michael: βDemocracy and Victory: Why Regime Type Hardly Mattersβ International Security. Owen, John: βHow Liberalism Produces Democratic Peaceβ International Organization. Rosato, Sebastian: βThe Flawed Logic of Democratic Peace Theoryβ American Political Science Review. Rosato, Sebastian: βExplaining the Democratic Peaceβ American Political Science Review. Constructivism, Regimes and Norms Β Β Β Institutions and Cooperation Buzan, Barry: βFrom International System to International Society: Structural Realism and Β Β Β Regime Theory Meet the English Schoolβ International Organization. Johnston, Alastair Iain: βReview of Strategic Cultureβ International Security. Jervis, Robert: βCooperation Under the Security Dilemmaβ World Politics. Jervis, Robert: βSecurity Regimesβ International Organization. Krasner, Stephen: βStructural Causes and Regime Consequences: Regimes as Intervening Β Β Β Variablesβ International Organization. Β Β Β Norms Carpenter, Charli: βWomen and Children First: Gender, Norms and Humanitarian Evacuation Β Β Β in the Balkansβ International Organization. Hopf, Ted: βThe Logic of Habit in International Relationsβ European Journal of International Β Β Β Relations. Kahl, Colin: βIn the Crossfire or the Crosshairs? Norms, Civilian Casualties and U.S. Conduct in Β Β Β Iraq.β International Security. Price, Richard and Tannenwald, Nina: βNorms and Deterrence, the Nuclear and Chemical Β Β Β Weapons Tabooβ in Katzenstein, Peter: The Culture of National Security: Norms and Identity in Β Β Β World Politics. Valentino, Huth and Croco: βCovenants without the Sword: International Law and the Β Β Β Protection of Civilians in Times of Warβ World Politics. Β Β Β Constructivism Bull, Hedley: The Anarchical Society: A Study of Order in World Politics. Finnemore, Martha: βConstructing Norms of Humanitarian Interventionβ in Katzenstein, Peter: Β Β Β The Culture of National Security: Norms and Identity in World Politics. Ferrell, Theo: βWorld Culture and Military Powerβ Security Studies. Development and WarΒ Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Β Beckley, Micheal: βEconomic Development and Military Effectivenessβ Journal of Security Studies. Desch, Michael: βDemocracy and Victory: Why Regime Type Hardly Mattersβ International Β Β Β Security. Narang, Vipin and Nelson, Rebecca: βWho Are These Belligerent Democratizers?β International Β Β Β Organization. Mansfield, Edward and Snyder, Jack: βDemocratic Transitions, Institutional Strength and Warβ Β Β Β International Organization. Snyder, Jack and Mansfield, Edward: Electing to Fight: Why Democracies Go to War. Snyder, Jack: Myths of Empire: Domestic Politics and International Ambition eponine997 and Longtime Lurker 2
GopherGrad Posted April 1, 2013 Posted April 1, 2013 Intra-national Wars Insurgent Organization Berman, Paul: Revolutionary Organization. Downes, Alexander: βDesperate Times, Desperate Measures: The Causes of Civilian Β Β Β Victimization in Warβ International Security. Felbab-Brown, Vanda: Shooting Up: Counter-Insurgency and the War on Drugs Horowitz, Michael: βNonstate Actors and the Diffusion of Innovations: The Case for Suicide Β Β Β Terrorismβ American Political Science Review. Kalyvas, Stathis: The Logic of Violence in Civil War. Merton, R: βSocial Structure and Anomieβ American Sociological Review Salisbury, Robert: βAn Exchange Theory of Interest Groupsβ Midwest Journal of Political Science. Weinstein, Jeremey: Inside Rebellion: the Politics of Insurgent Violence. Wood, Elizabeth: Collective Action and War in El Salvador. Greed, Grievance and the Motivation to Mobilize Violence Abrahms, Max: βWhat Terrorists Really Want: Terrorist Motives and Counterterrorism Β Β Β Strategyβ International Security. Cederman, Lars-Erik, et. al.: βEthnonationalist Triads: Assessing the Influence of Kin Groups in Β Β Β Civil Warβ World Politics. Collier, Paul and Hoefller, Anke: βOn economic causes of civil warβ Oxford Economic Papers. Elbadawi, I. and Sambanis, N. βHow much war will we see? Explaining the prevalence of Β Β Β civil war.β Journal of Conflict Resolution Fearon, James and Laitin, David: βEthnicity, Insurgency and Civil Warβ American Political Science Β Β Β Review. Gurr, Ted: Why Men Rebel. Horowitz, Donald: Ethnic Groups in Conflict. Lake, David and Rothchild, Donald: βContaining Fear: the Origin and Management of Ethnic Conflictβ International Organization. Merton, R.: Social structure and anomie. American Sociological Review Pape, Robert: βThe Strategic Logic of Suicide Terrorismβ American Political Science Review. Sambanis, Nicholas: βPartition as a Solution to Ethnic War: An Empirical Critique of the Β Β Β Theoretical Literatureβ World Politics. Snyder, Jack: From Voting to Violence: Democratization and Nationalist Conflict. Trager, Robert and Zagorcheva, Dessislava: βDeterring Terrorism: It Can Be Doneβ International Β Β Β Security. Viability and Success of Violent Challenges Arreguin-Toft: βHow the Weak Win Warsβ International Security. Edelstien, David: βOccupational Hazards: Why Military Operations Succeed or Failβ International Β Β Β Security. Jones, Seth: βThe Rise of Afghanistanβs Insurgency: State Failure and Jihadβ International Security. Lyall, Jason and Wilson, Isaiah: βRage Against the Machines: Explaining Outcomes in Β Β Β Counterinsurgency Warsβ International Organization. Mack, Andrew: βWhy Big Nations Lose Small Wars: the Politics of Asymmetric Conflictβ World Β Β Β Politics. Merom, Gil: βThe Social Origins of French Capitulation in Algeriaβ Armed Forces and Society. Political Economy of Violence Duffield, Micheal: βGlobalization, transborder trade and war economies.β Greed and Grievance, Economic Agendas in Civil Wars, Berdal, M. and Malone, D. (eds.) Gambetta, Diego: The Sicilian Mafia: The Business of Private Protection. Reno, William: βShadow states and the political economy of civil warsβ Greed and Grievance, Economic Agendas in Civil Wars, Berdal, M. and Malone, D. Crime and Criminal Challenges to State Authority Andreas and Nadelmann: Policing the Globe: Criminalization and Crime Control in International Relations Felbab-Brown, Vanda: Shooting Up: Counter-Insurgency and the War on Drugs Friman, Richard H. and Andreas, Peter: βIntroduction: International Relations and the Illicit Β Β Β Economyβ The Illicit Global Economy and State Power. Friman, Richard H.: βCrime and Globalizationβ Crime and the Global Political Economy. Gambetta, Diego: The Sicilian Mafia: The Business of Private Protection. Fiorentini and Peltzman: The Economics of Organized Crime. Lee, Renssallaer: The White Labyrinth: Cocaine and Political Power Mandel, Robert: Dark Logic: Transnational Criminal Tactics and Global Security Naylor, R.T.: Wages of Crime Varese, Frederico: Mafias on the Move: How Organized Crime Conquers New Territories Longtime Lurker and eponine997 2
ThisGuyRiteHere Posted April 2, 2013 Author Posted April 2, 2013 That is an epic list. I appreciate it.
wtncffts Posted April 2, 2013 Posted April 2, 2013 GopherGrad, you had comps for your MA? That's hardcore...
catchermiscount Posted April 2, 2013 Posted April 2, 2013 (edited) That's a very nice, though very long, list.Β Going in to grad school, I would probably spend more time on theory than on empirics (if you're going to insist on having a fruitful summer instead of watching YouTube videos the whole time like I did), and I would probably spend more time on fewer pieces that are related to one another. Β One of the best things you can do is really read and understand Fearon's "Rationalist Explanations for War" in the 1995 IO.Β The models aren't complicated, so you should be able to digest them.Β While this article is perhaps the most important one written in the past thirty years or so, it is mis-cited and mis-quoted so often that it will make your head spin.Β That's a pity, because Fearon takes great lengths to be really clear with the explication.Β To hear many people tell it, war is simply something that happens when there are informational asymmetries, indivisible goods, or commitment problems (which are the three brief names of the rationalist explanations).Β There is a lot more meat on each of those bones, and folks should remember that they're relying on a particular kind of model when they're considering those explanations. Β In the name of seeing that formal models are tools we use rather than law-generating, infallible collections of symbols that ensure correctness, you might move on to Powell's "War as a Commitment Problem," which (I believe) is in the 2006 IO.Β Powell laments the fact that so much of the scholarship inspired by Fearon 1995 has focused on information issues and observes that good indivisibilities are just a particular kind of commitment problem (which is a point you may have come up with yourself if you really thought hard while reading Fearon 1995). Β If you're itching for a book to read, Powell's "In the Shadow of Power" is a good one. Β Fearon and Powell are both reasonably readable.Β If you're feeling very ambitious and would like to see a much more technical, but substantively motivated, response to this sort of thing, you might check out Fey and Ramsay's "Mutual Optimism and War" in the 2007 AJPS.Β Fearon's conception of incomplete information is informed by historian Geoffrey Blainey's (1988) Causes for War (another good book to read); Blainey spends a lot of time on mutual optimism as the informational mechanism that causes war.Β So Fey and Ramsay formalize "mutual optimism" and demonstrate that, in the two-person bargaining situations that Fearon is talking about, mutual optimism is not a consistent cause for war---in the classes of scenarios where mutual optimism is a necessary condition for war, there is no war due to mutual optimism in equilibrium.Β This is a point that Slantchev and Tarar (AJPS 2011) take issue with, though I don't think their response to Fey and Ramsay was completely well-founded. Β So if you can really dig in to three or four theoretical pieces and really own them, you're off to a GREAT start.Β These are just two little vein from Fearon to Powell on commitment and Fearon to Fey and Ramsay to Slantchev and Tarar on mutual optimism.Β All are inspired by historian Blainey.Β There are other, similar veins if you're interested in them (bargaining while fighting comes to mind); feel free to PM if you'd like.Β But the big point here is:Β you might as well think theory while you have the chance now. Edited April 2, 2013 by coachrjc aulait and eponine997 2
ThisGuyRiteHere Posted April 2, 2013 Author Posted April 2, 2013 This is really good discussion! So can anyone tell me the different types of "conflict" there are?What is everyone finding (or has found) in their past research?That's a very nice, though very long, list.Β Going in to grad school, I would probably spend more time on theory than on empirics (if you're going to insist on having a fruitful summer instead of watching YouTube videos the whole time like I did), and I would probably spend more time on fewer pieces that are related to one another.Β One of the best things you can do is really read and understand Fearon's "Rationalist Explanations for War" in the 1995 IO.Β The models aren't complicated, so you should be able to digest them.Β While this article is perhaps the most important one written in the past thirty years or so, it is mis-cited and mis-quoted so often that it will make your head spin.Β That's a pity, because Fearon takes great lengths to be really clear with the explication.Β To hear many people tell it, war is simply something that happens when there are informational asymmetries, indivisible goods, or commitment problems (which are the three brief names of the rationalist explanations).Β There is a lot more meat on each of those bones, and folks should remember that they're relying on a particular kind of model when they're considering those explanations.Β In the name of seeing that formal models are tools we use rather than law-generating, infallible collections of symbols that ensure correctness, you might move on to Powell's "War as a Commitment Problem," which (I believe) is in the 2006 IO.Β Powell laments the fact that so much of the scholarship inspired by Fearon 1995 has focused on information issues and observes that good indivisibilities are just a particular kind of commitment problem (which is a point you may have come up with yourself if you really thought hard while reading Fearon 1995).Β If you're itching for a book to read, Powell's "In the Shadow of Power" is a good one.Β Fearon and Powell are both reasonably readable.Β If you're feeling very ambitious and would like to see a much more technical, but substantively motivated, response to this sort of thing, you might check out Fey and Ramsay's "Mutual Optimism and War" in the 2007 AJPS.Β Fearon's conception of incomplete information is informed by historian Geoffrey Blainey's (1988) Causes for War (another good book to read); Blainey spends a lot of time on mutual optimism as the informational mechanism that causes war.Β So Fey and Ramsay formalize "mutual optimism" and demonstrate that, in the two-person bargaining situations that Fearon is talking about, mutual optimism is not a consistent cause for war---in the classes of scenarios where mutual optimism is a necessary condition for war, there is no war due to mutual optimism in equilibrium.Β This is a point that Slantchev and Tarar (AJPS 2011) take issue with, though I don't think their response to Fey and Ramsay was completely well-founded.Β So if you can really dig in to three or four theoretical pieces and really own them, you're off to a GREAT start.Β These are just two little vein from Fearon to Powell on commitment and Fearon to Fey and Ramsay to Slantchev and Tarar on mutual optimism.Β All are inspired by historian Blainey.Β There are other, similar veins if you're interested in them (bargaining while fighting comes to mind); feel free to PM if you'd like.Β But the big point here is:Β you might as well think theory while you have the chance now.
GopherGrad Posted April 2, 2013 Posted April 2, 2013 Yep. MA comps. I sit tomorrow to write on the questions, and a week later I have to defend my essay answers against a panel of faculty. W00t. Β The list is super huge. Look for stuff that interests you. Read abstracts. If anyone needs one of the articles on the list but can't get it free, PM me. Β Β Going in to grad school, I would probably spend more time on theory than on empirics Β I agree, although it's funny to hear this as I become frustrated with how my theory focus has left me with little new to say about a lot of things. I'm looking forward to start digging through the history of conflict to find some puzzles so I can do some damn writing. Β So can anyone tell me the different types of "conflict" there are? Β That's a huge question. I think most people would agree that there is a vast difference in the way we think of wars between states on one hand and conflict between non-state actors, or non-state actors and states on the other. Β My interest is far more in the latter, and one way to chop up the "types" of conflict is to ask "why are these groups using violence? In what way are they challenging the state's presumed monopoly?" Β So, for example, violence over drug trafficking occurs (in part) because the state has elected to give up its imperative to regulate the narcotics market. It's sovereignty is weak in an economic market because it cannot enforce fairness in commercial relations between traffickers, so actors with violent capacity sense an opportunity to provide protection in that void. Β Contrast that with ethnic protection markets among recent immigrant groups ("mafias"). In those circumstances, the state's sovereignty is weak among a social group, so actors with violent capacity provide protection in that void. Those customers need protection and dispute resolution services in all facets of their lives rather than just in one market. The way that violence is used as a tactic to support a protection business in those two circumstances is very different. (Richard Friman and Peter Andreas write a lot about prohibition regimes and illicit commerce; Diego Gambetta has pretty much written the bible on the political economy of protection racket mafias.) There are other model or ideal ways that violent actors can selectively exploit state particularized state weakness. War economies, like that in the DRC, attempt to atomize communities and impose rents on a variety of transactions. The pillage of lootable resources, like alluvial diamonds in Sierra Leone, works a compeletely different way. Β I actually just got the great news that I'll be teaching an upper division course this summer at my MA soon-to-be alma about the political economy of violence, so understanding how this typology works gets to be a big part of my summer. eponine997 1
eponine997 Posted April 2, 2013 Posted April 2, 2013 The list is super huge. Look for stuff that interests you. Read abstracts. If anyone needs one of the articles on the list but can't get it free, PM me. Β You, sir, are a high quality human being. Β And that is a great list... wish I'd had this before starting my MA/MA thesis. Β Β Solid advice from both GopherGrad and Coachrjc. Β Someone should "pin" this thread. Β Β As for "conflict types," I would emphasize (from the list) Kalyvas's Logic of Violence in Civil War. Β Though the title may suggest a narrow focus, his typology of violence can be applied beyond intrastate wars. Β
catchermiscount Posted April 2, 2013 Posted April 2, 2013 At the risk of sounding glib, I don't really know what folks mean by "types" of conflict.Β Do we mean conflicts that are fought in a certain kind of way, or do we mean conflicts that arise for a certain set of reasons, or conflicts that are fought between certain kinds of combatants, or what?Β For my own stuff (which, of course, has little to do with anything), a fight is a fight is a fight.Β The rest gets me too confused!
hawkeye78 Posted April 2, 2013 Posted April 2, 2013 At the risk of sounding glib, I don't really know what folks mean by "types" of conflict.Β Do we mean conflicts that are fought in a certain kind of way, or do we mean conflicts that arise for a certain set of reasons, or conflicts that are fought between certain kinds of combatants, or what?Β For my own stuff (which, of course, has little to do with anything), a fight is a fight is a fight.Β The rest gets me too confused! Agree. Β My own research is within the larger subcategory of intrastate conflict but looks at ethnic conflict and all the sub topics there as well as non-state actors like terror groups, rebel groups, etc. Every one of those has tons of branches that you can expand each topic in.
GopherGrad Posted April 2, 2013 Posted April 2, 2013 I would emphasize (from the list) Kalyvas's Logic of Violence in Civil War Β Classic. Gurr's Why Men Rebel, Weinstien's Inside Rebellion, Reno's Shadow States and Gambetta's Sicilian Mafia are all also on my list of mind-blowing classics. Β At the risk of sounding glib, I don't really know what folks mean by "types" of conflict.Β Do we mean conflicts that are fought in a certain kind of way, or do we mean conflicts that arise for a certain set of reasons, or conflicts that are fought between certain kinds of combatants, or what? Β I think you can mean any of them, it sort of depends what puzzle you're solving, right? You sort of define your categories based on whether they have the characteristics that you think drive your outcomes.
catchermiscount Posted April 2, 2013 Posted April 2, 2013 Well that was what I was getting at, yeah.Β But there probably isn't a universally meaningful classification scheme (is all I meant to say).
Princolum Posted April 3, 2013 Posted April 3, 2013 hello everyone I'm fluent in Persian, Turkish and Arabic, so I have a question: is it a positive point in Apply process for IR, focusing the Middle East?Β
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