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Why and how should we go for a multicausal analysis in the study of foreign policy? (Meta-)theoretical rationales and methodological rules

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 March 2011

Abstract

This article argues that International Relations (IR) researchers concerned with why-questions about the state's external behaviour ought to employ a multicausal approach attentive to the interrelated relationship between external structures and internal agents, presenting the (meta-)theoretical rationales underlying its argument. Here the author suggests ‘a rich/bold ontology’ regarding foreign policy behaviour. Then the article elaborates on detailed and explicit guidelines on how to traverse the bridge that connects the insights of that rich ontology to the empirical research necessary to make claims about the real world of any one moment. In a related vein, the article claims that a multicausal approach should be established using what the author calls ‘loose-knit deductive reasoning’ through which epistemological and methodological openness can be preserved in a manageable way. More importantly, this article discusses the role of theory for IR scholarship and the standards for judging theoretical contributions and progress in the field of IR. Ultimately, the author argues that a complex and flexible approach – both as a useful mode of explanation and as a progressive model of theory construction – can make important contributions to a better understanding of foreign policy and world politics, not only because it enables researchers to become keenly sensitive to the complex reality underlying a nation's foreign policy and to the interrelated relationship between structures and agents in international relations, but also because it can serve to provide a secure base for the progressive accumulation of the evidence closely associated with multiple causation on which any adequate explanation about complex foreign policy behaviour must surely be founded and without which general theory cannot really flourish.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © British International Studies Association 2010

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References

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41 Certainly, there have been integrated studies on foreign policy and attempts to develop integrated theoretical frameworks. See, for example, Rosenau, James N., ‘Pre-theories and Theories of Foreign Policy’, in Farrell, Barry (ed.), Approaches in Comparative and International Politics (Evanston: Northwestern University Press, 1966)Google Scholar ; Brecher, Michael, The Foreign Policy System of Israel: Setting, Images, and Process (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1972)Google Scholar ; Mintz, Alex, ‘How Do Leaders Make Decisions?: A Poliheuristic Perspective’, The Journal of Conflict Resolution, 48:1 (2004), pp. 313CrossRefGoogle Scholar . Yet these studies are more in the nature of exceptional examples rather than representative cases in a generally accepted research method in the field of IR.

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