International Relations theory made easy (5): Liberal Institutionalism
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- čas přidán 23. 07. 2024
- Introductory lecture to the discipline of International Relations by Dr Patrick Theiner, Lecturer in Politics and International Relations at the University of Edinburgh, UK. Recorded in late 2020.
"Carrot in a Box" video: • "Carrot in a Box" Jimm...
== Timestamps ==
00:00 - Intro
00:48 - Neorealism refresher
02:29 - Are we really living in a neorealist world?
05:25 - Early liberal thinkers
08:01 - Core liberal ideas
11:11 - Interdependence as a core concept
13:26 - Neorealism vs. institutionalism
15:33 - When do we expect cooperation?
18:27 - Game theory basics
18:52 - Carrot in a box
23:04 - Coordination game
27:39 - Prisoner's Dilemma
34:43 - Prisoner's Dilemmas in IR
38:19 - Escaping the Prisoner's Dilemma
41:37 - When are institutions created?
46:25 - Is institutionalism a good theory?
I totally loved this video, the most helpful and precise video about liberal institutionalism in YT by far! I'll be checking out your videos on other classical theories of IIRR. You gained a new subscriber my man!
Patrick, I just started studying International Relations here in Sweden and I just wanted to say that your lectures are great. I watched your lecture on realism which gave me a great overview of the main ideas of the ideology while keeping it easy and digestible. Your lectures are a wonderful complement to our lectures and the course books, which tend to be very heavy on theory. I really appreciate you sharing your knowledge. Thanks you! Oh, and your pronunciation of "Dagen H" was actually very solid!
Golden balls was a show in the early 2000s which effectively ended with the prisoner’s dilemma.
It ended when someone figured out how to implement it every time.
I commend you for this compelling elucidation of this topic, and I really enjoyed the lecture thanks for the method of analysis.
I'm currently working on my final project for my undergraduate degree in IR here in Indonesia and need to refresh my mind on some key concept I learned (poorly) back in 2020 due to pandemic and the whole online learning thing. All I can say is thank you so much, your way of explaining it connect so well with my brain and gave me the spark to continue on my project!!
I'm writing my honours thesis and loving having this refersher going on in the background to keep the ideas flowing!
Amazing class. Thank you!
Thanks Mr Theinner for your lecturing 🌐🇬🇧♥️
it is so important tema and it is my favorite study. I would like to admire you.
thanks for helping me out
Great class!
Wow really helpful
Sir! I have one question. Apart from the treaties mentioned in the video, are there any other examples of "insitutions" for institutional liberalism? Is there any instrinsically manifest relation between the establishment of institutions and the core element of cooperation? How do institutions favour cooperation in the frame of the anarchic international system? Also, what non-states actors are taken on account by institutionalism?
Thanks for taking the time to read my questions! I got an IIRR theory test tomorrow and I decided to study with these amazing lecture of yours!
Thanks for the kind words!
'Institutions' besides treaties would be any cooperation that's formalized and regular, even though they don't necessarily have an organizational structure. The G7/G8 meetings might be a good example: they happen regularly, always assemble the same actors, and follow a certain script - but they're neither based on an international treaty nor is there a secretariat.
Hey. So I don’t know if I am the only one but the video clips you play in your videos are not visible but blurred out (probably by youtube copyright). Could you just add links of those videos either in the footnotes or attach a hyperlink sticker when the video is playing. At first I spent a lot of time trying to find the same video by your description (and audio) because I could only hear the audio but not see the actual video and then I realized that when you finish the video it shows the youtube title for less than a second. However it would be way easier if there was a link reference to the video. Thanks!
Great point! I've added an info card where the video begins, and also a link in the description. Hope that helps!
Well what if we develop a way to time share Kashmir between Pakistan and India 😁