"This book emphasizes the comparative study of theoretical as well as hypothetical issues of structural realism of international relations theory vis-áa-vis those of systemic geopolitical analysis. Are they scientific fields evolved in parallel, common philosophical and cognitive roots? Could they be used as complementary theoretical tools or their relation is disjunctive and contrapuntal? When decoding the core hypotheses of structural realism and systemic geopolitical analysis, an effort takes place for the sake of the central scientific aim; i.e. the untainted descriptive analysis without ontologically groundless claims. The debate on interstate relations and the framework, on which these are structured, is long-term with its philosophical background detected at the juxtaposition between those referring to "sein" and the others expressing the "sollen". This research struggles to explain the converging and diverging points of view between the neorealist approach of international relations theory and the systemic geopolitical analysis"--
Author(s): Ioannis T. Mazis, Markos Troulis, Xanthippi Domatioti
Series: Global Political Studies
Publisher: Nova Science Publishers
Year: 2021
Language: English
Pages: 147
City: New York
Contents
Foreword by Emeritus Professor Panayiotis Ifestos
Systemic Geopolitics, International Relations Theory and the Anarchy–Based Distributional Functions of Power in International Politics
Preface
Acknowledgements
Chapter 1
Introduction
Some Useful Remarks on Geopolitics
Why Analyze Power?
Geopolitics and Ideology
Is Geopolitics Immoral?
Geo–Propaganda
Chapter 2
Ontological References
Chapter 3
Structural Realism
Chapter 4
Systemic Geopolitical Analysis
Chapter 5
Convergences
Chapter 6
Divergences
Chapter 7
Epistemological and Methodological Contradictions
Chapter 8
The Waltzian Programme and Systemic Geopolitics
Chapter 9
An Evolution of the Waltzian Programme: John Mearsheimer’s Approach
Chapter 10
Conclusion
References
About the Authors
Index
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