Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of illustrations
- Preface
- List of abbreviations
- 1 Patterns of regional security during the Cold War
- 2 Patterns of regional security post-Cold War
- Part I Introduction: developing a regional approach to global security
- Introduction
- 1 Theories and histories about the structure of contemporary international security
- 2 Levels: distinguishing the regional from the global
- 3 Security complexes: a theory of regional security
- Conclusions
- Part II Asia
- Part III The Middle East and Africa
- Part IV The Americas
- Part V The Europes
- Part VI Conclusions
- Glossary
- References
- News media
- Index of names
- General Index
- CAMBRIDGE STUDIES IN INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
1 - Theories and histories about the structure of contemporary international security
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 December 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of illustrations
- Preface
- List of abbreviations
- 1 Patterns of regional security during the Cold War
- 2 Patterns of regional security post-Cold War
- Part I Introduction: developing a regional approach to global security
- Introduction
- 1 Theories and histories about the structure of contemporary international security
- 2 Levels: distinguishing the regional from the global
- 3 Security complexes: a theory of regional security
- Conclusions
- Part II Asia
- Part III The Middle East and Africa
- Part IV The Americas
- Part V The Europes
- Part VI Conclusions
- Glossary
- References
- News media
- Index of names
- General Index
- CAMBRIDGE STUDIES IN INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
Summary
This chapter starts by sketching out the three main perspectives on the structure of international security. The second section gives a short history of regional security, and the third reflects on the legacies of that past for states and regions.
Three theoretical perspectives on the post-Cold War security order
The three principal theoretical perspectives on post-Cold War international security structure are neorealist, globalist, and regionalist. What do we mean by ‘structure’ in this context? We are using it in broadly Waltzian (1979) terms to mean the principles of arrangement of the parts in a system, and how the parts are differentiated from each other. But our range is wider than the neorealist formulation (though we incorporate it) because we want: (a) to look at structural perspectives other than the neorealist one; and (b) to privilege the regionalist perspective.
The neorealist perspective is widely understood and, since we will have more to say about it in chapter 2, does not need to be explained at length here. It is state-centric, and rests on an argument about power polarity: if not bipolarity, then necessarily either unipolarity or multipolarity (or some hybrid). This debate is about the distribution of material power in the international system, which in neorealism determines the global political (and thereby also security) structure, and the interplay of this with balance-of-power logic.
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- Regions and PowersThe Structure of International Security, pp. 6 - 26Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2003