Poly-participant and multidimensional world: On the way to a new theory of international relations
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St Petersburg State University
Abstract
In the early 21st century several conditions favorable for a new theory of international relations
have been formed in Russia. New trends in interstate relations have clearly been displayed
and Russian foreign policy needs to update its theoretical and conceptual foundations. A new
philosophical basis has been formed as Russian IR theory is in crisis. To overcome the crisis,
the framework of a new IR theory is suggested. It rests on existing theories and concepts that
satisfy the principles of post-non-classical philosophy of science, the concept of Russian foreign
policy, the fact that contemporary world events cannot be explained using the previously
created concepts, and interdisciplinarity which does not lead to the erosion of the language of
science in regard to IR. These sources made it possible to identify a number of fundamental
provisions for the new IR theory: the interpretation of chaos as an order with unknown laws,
recognition of each state as a self-sufficient participant in international relations, multivariativity
of foreign policies, and the understanding of the world as a non-polar system. On their
basis, a framework was developed for the theory of a poly-participant and multidimensional
world where the main elements are states (participants) and non-state actors. According to
the theory, the world has several dimensions: space, dynamical time, structural time, a set
of subsystems (functional spheres), level, and control. Balance is ensured by the balance of
foreign policies and reactions to them, which are determined by the interests of states, the
influence and power of states in certain regions or functional fields. This sets the curvature
of the world, which makes it change constantly. In the event of imbalance or a weakening of
control, a vacuum appears and it provokes the development of uncontrolled processes. Such a
complex structure of the modern world allows us to characterize it as a network that defines
contemporary international relations as relational.
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Boldyrev V. E. Poly-participant and multidimensional world: On the way to a new theory of international relations. Vestnik of Saint Petersburg University. International Relations, 2020, vol. 13, issue 4, pp. 507–526.