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  1. on it rather the understanding of what it might be.The original assumption of the state as the bedrock assumption of the study of International Relations as it developed, and took on disciplinary form and identity, in the Cold War world consoli-dated an earlier and wider presumption in which the sta.

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  2. States remain the key actors in international relations. Theoretically, a state must have a defined territory, a permanent population and a government capable of controlling its territory and conducting international relations. States also require some measure of external recognition. In spite of the obvious limits of unilateralism, the power ...

  3. International relations as a discipline is chiefly concerned with what states do on the world stage and, in turn, how their actions affect other states. This article first reviews the rationales behind state-centric theories of international relations. The second section examines criticisms and probes the limits of state-centric theories.

  4. h4A critical reassessment of the concepts of the state and sovereignty in international relations theory/h4 pThe concept of the state plays a central role in in...

  5. Aug 29, 2012 · Political Theories of International Relations: From Thucydides to the Present. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1998. Covers a wide range of writers on positive and normative issues. Develops specific and contextualized commentary on historical writing on the state and how it operates and should operate.

  6. Metrics. This book, first published in 2000, provides students with an overview of the main theories of the state found in International Relations. Many International Relation scholars are proclaiming the state to be 'dead', while others lament the lack of an adequate theory of the state in International Relations.

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  8. Mar 2, 2011 · In international law, the declaratory and constitutive nature of the state is debated both in theory and in practice. The major divide centers on the extent to which statehood depends on the intrinsic character of the actor or on its external legitimacy in the eyes of other states. Critical cases of claims to sovereignty show that, as a legal ...

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