Kant and the Kantian paradigm in international relations

1990 Review of International Studies 203 citations

Abstract

Although few in number and limited in scope, Kant's writings on international relations have had a lasting influence and have given rise to a wide range of interpretations. Kant's famous pamphlet, Perpetual Peace , has been seen as advocating federalism, world government, a League of Nations-type security system and outright pacifism. Underlying much of the debate on Kant lies a divergence over the relationship between what might broadly be called the ‘statist’ and the ‘cosmopolitan’ sides of Kant's writings. On one side, there are those who argue that Kant is primarily concerned with order at the level of interstate relations. Kant, it is argued, did not want to transcend the state system but to improve it. He wanted to subject the international anarchy to law and to find a solution to the problem of war but in a way which would not sacrifice the essential autonomy and independence of states.

Keywords

AutonomySubject (documents)FederalismPhilosophyInternational relationsState (computer science)EpistemologyPolitical scienceDivergence (linguistics)Law and economicsSovereigntyIndependence (probability theory)SacrificeLawSociologyTheologyMathematics

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Publication Info

Year
1990
Type
article
Volume
16
Issue
3
Pages
183-205
Citations
203
Access
Closed

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Andrew Hurrell (1990). Kant and the Kantian paradigm in international relations. Review of International Studies , 16 (3) , 183-205. https://doi.org/10.1017/s026021050011246x

Identifiers

DOI
10.1017/s026021050011246x