International relations/Related Articles
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- See also changes related to International relations, or pages that link to International relations or to this page or whose text contains "International relations".
Parent topics
- Nation [r]: A large group of people with a singular, shared, and commonly-accepted historical identity, identified by a universally recognised name. [e]
- Grand strategy [r]: Add brief definition or description
Subtopics
- Diplomacy (foreign policy [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations [r]: Add brief definition or description
- International economics [r]: The study of the patterns and consequences of transactions and interactions between the inhabitants of different countries, including trade, investment and migration. [e]
- Economic warfare [r]: The use of principally non-military methods to impose national policy, when those methods deal in the broad sense of economics, such as embargoes, freezing assets, and buying up raw materials. It may be complemented by military means such as intercepting supply shipments or attacking factories. [e]
- International law [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Lawfare [r]: The use of international law as a component of national grand strategy, or asymmetrical warfare by national or non-national actors [e]
- International law enforcement [r]: The practice of cooperation, among nations, to deal with individuals or non-state criminal groups, through police and judicial agencies such as Interpol [e]
- International organization [r]: Add brief definition or description
- United Nations [r]: An international organization that was founded in 1945 with the mission of preventing international war, protecting human rights, supporting social progress and justice, and helping with economic progress. [e]
- Realism (foreign policy) [r]: A concept, in foreign policy, that actors can cooperate on matters of common external concern, without attempting to reform one anothers' internal structures [e]
- Detente [r]: A transition of the view of U.S. foreign policy from the Cold War model to one based on "realism", and a balance of power among the U.S., U.S.S.R., and China; most associated with Richard Nixon and Henry Kissinger [e]
- Wilsonianism [r]: Foreign policy principles of President Woodrow Wilson to achieve a world without war; it also assumed altruistic American exceptionalism, opposition to non-democratic rule, national self-determination and opposition to colonial empires; and may involve the use of military force as a last resort, although it did not contemplate preventive war; sometimes called "idealism" in foreign policy, as opposed to a "realistic" foreign policy that seeks to gain specific economic or military benefits for the nation [e]
- Jacksonian American nationalism [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Neoconservatism [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Neoisolationism [r]: Primarily a U.S. foreign policy associated with the 1950s, a revival of isolationism arising from increased anti-Soviet and anti-European attitudes [e]