The authoritarian challenge: liberal thinking on autocracy and international relations, 1930–45

IF 2.2 1区 社会学 Q1 INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
Matthew Draper, Stephan Haggard
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Abstract The return of authoritarian great powers, the slowing of the democratic wave, and outright reversion to authoritarian rule pose important questions for international theory. What are the implications of an international system populated with more autocracies? This question was posed by a diverse array of social scientists, public intellectuals, and policy analysts in response to the autocratic wave in Europe in the 1920s and 1930s. We show that a series of conversations emanating from quite diverse intellectual priors – from Christian realists to international lawyers and disaffected Marxists – converged on the risks these autocratic regimes posed to democratic regimes and the international order they sought to forge. These risks included unconstrained rulers, an inability to sustain international commitments and political processes that undermined rational deliberation at home and spread disinformation abroad. The reading of this work suggests an under-appreciated strand of liberal international relations theory, and these debates have direct implications for liberal arguments about the democratic peace. Rather than theorizing why democracies avoid war, they underscore the importance of understanding why authoritarian and democratic countries are particularly prone to conflict.
威权主义的挑战:关于专制与国际关系的自由主义思考,1930 - 1945
专制大国的回归、民主浪潮的放缓以及专制统治的彻底回归,对国际理论提出了重要的问题。一个充斥着更多独裁国家的国际体系意味着什么?这个问题是由各种各样的社会科学家、公共知识分子和政策分析家在回应20世纪20年代和30年代欧洲的专制浪潮时提出的。我们展示了一系列来自不同知识分子的对话——从基督教现实主义者到国际律师和心怀不满的马克思主义者——都集中在这些专制政权对民主政权和他们试图建立的国际秩序构成的风险上。这些风险包括不受约束的统治者,无法维持国际承诺,以及破坏国内理性审议和在国外传播虚假信息的政治进程。阅读这篇文章,可以发现自由主义国际关系理论中一个被低估的部分,而这些辩论对自由主义关于民主和平的论点有直接的影响。他们没有从理论上解释为什么民主国家避免战争,而是强调了理解为什么专制国家和民主国家特别容易发生冲突的重要性。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
6.60
自引率
0.00%
发文量
20
期刊介绍: Editorial board International Theory (IT) is a peer reviewed journal which promotes theoretical scholarship about the positive, legal, and normative aspects of world politics respectively. IT is open to theory of absolutely all varieties and from all disciplines, provided it addresses problems of politics, broadly defined and pertains to the international. IT welcomes scholarship that uses evidence from the real world to advance theoretical arguments. However, IT is intended as a forum where scholars can develop theoretical arguments in depth without an expectation of extensive empirical analysis. IT’s over-arching goal is to promote communication and engagement across theoretical and disciplinary traditions. IT puts a premium on contributors’ ability to reach as broad an audience as possible, both in the questions they engage and in their accessibility to other approaches. This might be done by addressing problems that can only be understood by combining multiple disciplinary discourses, like institutional design, or practical ethics; or by addressing phenomena that have broad ramifications, like civilizing processes in world politics, or the evolution of environmental norms. IT is also open to work that remains within one scholarly tradition, although in that case authors must make clear the horizon of their arguments in relation to other theoretical approaches.
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