Subject and system in international interaction
- 1 January 1989
- journal article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in International Organization
- Vol. 43 (3), 475-503
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0020818300033002
Abstract
Recent interest in cognitive approaches to international interaction in general and international regimes in particular has not been matched by development in theory and methodology. This article details a systematic “subjective” approach that seeks to meet this need. Its claims are developed through its comparison with the accomplishments and shortcomings of more established approaches to the study of international interaction and, in particular, microeconomic formal theory. The subjective alternative can model both individual subjects and the systems in which they are participating. As such, it offers much more in terms of continuities and connections between agents and system structure than do traditional psychological analyses in international relations. The theoretical arguments proceed in the context of a study of cooperation and conflict over Antarctica and its evolving regimes.Keywords
This publication has 17 references indexed in Scilit:
- Environmental Mediation for International ProblemsInternational Studies Quarterly, 1987
- Nuclear learning and U.S.–Soviet security regimesInternational Organization, 1987
- The agent-structure problem in international relations theoryInternational Organization, 1987
- Theories of international regimesInternational Organization, 1987
- An Evolutionary Approach to NormsAmerican Political Science Review, 1986
- The Moralism of Attitudes Supporting Intergroup ViolencePolitical Psychology, 1986
- An Empirical Test of the Utility of the Observations-To-Variables Ratio in Factor and Components AnalysisApplied Psychological Measurement, 1985
- A strategic planning network for non‐profit organizationsStrategic Management Journal, 1984
- Q methodology and Newton's fifth rule.American Psychologist, 1979
- Foreign policy communication dramas: How mediated rhetoric played in Peoria in campaign '76Quarterly Journal of Speech, 1977