The Agent-Structure Problem in International Relations Theory

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Volume 06, Number 023, 2009

Abstract

In this article the nature of structural analysis in each of neorealist and world-system theory are clarified and contrast. The author’s primary interest, however, is to critique the conceptions of structural theory found in each of them, and to use this critique to motivate the development of a new approach to structural theorizing about international relations adapted from the work of "structuration theorists" in sociology. In the first section, the author examines the nature of the agent-structure “problem” and briefly identifies the principal kinds of solutions to it. In the second section the author suggests that neorealism and world-system theory embody two of these solutions, the methodological individualist and structuralist ones, respectively. In the third section structurationist approach and its foundations in realist philosophy of science are being defined. In the fourth section, some general epistemological and theoretical implications of structuration theory for the explanation of state action are examined. In the conclusion, the author returns to some implications of scientific realism for social scientific research.

Keywords

The Agent-Structure Problem, Neorealism, World-System Theory.

Citation

Wendt, Alexander E., “The Agent-Structure Problem in International Relations Theory”, International Organization, Volume 41, No 3, Summer 1987, p. 335-370.

Affiliations

  • Alexander E. Wendt, Not provided
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