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A 3 page paper that discusses perspectives of international order. The paper briefly discusses realism, Marxism, liberalism and constructivism as well as collective and distributive power. The writer comments about the U.S. in the discussion. Bibliography lists 3 sources
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3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: ME12_PG690896.doc
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social life, from the rules that sustains the order and goals and by the institutions that make the rules effective in reaching the goals (Open University, 2011b). The English school
of thought, which is one way to perceive international order, suggests that the primary goals of social life include guarantees for security, property and agreements and the types of behavior
that will maintain these guarantees (Open University, 2011b). The liberal perspective suggests that international order has to do with pursuing gains and the behaviors that assure these gains (Open
University, 2011b). The English school rationalism incorporates state-centric liberalism (Hobson, 2003). The liberal theory suggests the state is socially adaptive in order to meet the social and economic needs of
its people. This adaptability is a source of power and influence (Hobson, 2003). There is a high degree of liberalism in America. The country seems to adapt to changing needs
and demands, which gives it both domestic and international power as a state. A Marxist perspective relative to international order is one that shows how power and capitalism are
interdependent and both are shaped by the international economy (Open University, 2011b). Hobson (2003) explains that using the realism perspective in international relations theory, all states have different degrees
of power during different historical periods. He states that states have agential power at different times in sufficient degrees that they can shape the inter-state system. Hobson (2003) identifies six
principles associated with classical realism, i.e., the state as agent. These are historical variability, relative and absolute gains, social sovereignty, variable social rationality, variable domestic agential state power and
variable international agential state power and morality (Hobson, 2003). The United States gained power following World War II. While the U.S. and Russia vied to become the strongest military power,
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