When states choose to die: Reassessing assumptions about what states want

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Abstract

In order to explain the creation and maintenance of a number of important international institutions, scholars must reconsider a commonly held assumption about what states want. Structural realists show that the assumption that states desire survival explains a wide range of outcomes. Yet the survival assumption prevents both realists and liberal institutionalists from offering a plausible account of international organizations that are costly to autonomy. The cultures of anarchy argument helps explain when the desire to survive is more or less salient but is burdened with the survival assumption nonetheless. I argue that it is useful to assume that states pursue the national interest and that survival is only a potential means to that end. By employing this assumption within the cultures of anarchy framework, we can begin to formulate an explanation for the willingness of states to cede autonomy to international institutions.

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CITATION STYLE

APA

Howes, D. E. (2003). When states choose to die: Reassessing assumptions about what states want. International Studies Quarterly, 47(4), 669–692. https://doi.org/10.1046/j.0020-8833.2003.00283.x

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