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UNIT12: International Relations

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Title: UNIT12: International Relations


1
UNIT12International Relations
  • Discussion Limited to Influence of Science and
    Technology on
  •   Political
  • Economic, and
  • Social International Relations
  •  

2
Political Relations Technology and Colonialism
  • Globalization of international relations began
    between 1500 and 1800. European colonialist
    inroads in Asia, Africa, and the Americas were
    facilitated by the invention or adaptation of the
    following.
  •  
  • Clock
  • Compass
  • Gunpowder
  • Cannon
  • Improvements in Ship Design
  •  
  • Iron hulled steam ships of the 19th century
    enabled greater geographical penetration into
    Africa and Asia expanding European imperialism in
    those continents.

3
Political Relations Technology of the 19th
Century
  • The following technological improvements of the
    19th century led to a revolution in imperialism.
  •  
  • Rifling
  • Percussion Cap
  • Cylindrical-conoidal bullet
  • Breechloading
  • Metal Cartridges
  • Smokeless Explosives
  • Magazines and
  • Repeating Mechanisms

4
Political Relations Technology of the 19th
Century (continued)
  • Later developments including machine guns and
    mushrooming bullets decimated resisters in
    Africa, Asia and India.
  •  
  • Ironically, technology eventually played an
    important part in the demise of political
    colonialism. The miniaturization and mobility of
    many modern weapons and weapon systems made it
    impossible to prevent their diffusion. Thus
    colonialist advantages in military technology
    proved short lived.

5
Technology and Contemporary Revolutions with
International Components
  • Iran 1979 Shiite Revolution
  •  
  • Soviet Union 1989 Glasnost and Perestroika
  •  
  • East Germany
  •  
  • Romania

6
Science Technology and War in the 20th Century
  • Weapons technology of the 20th century (poison
    gas, fighter planes, tanks) caused major
    nation-states to link their national civilian
    scientific and technological enterprises with
    their respective military establishments.
  •  
  • In World War II thousands of German and American
    physicists and engineers were mobilized by their
    governments and developed V-2 rockets, proximity
    fuses, and radar.
  •  
  • In the U. S. it was the atomic bomb. Many contend
    that this single development has had greater
    influence on international relations than any
    other. One effect was the initiation of an arms
    race that is unequaled in history. It caused
    billions of dollars from the budgets of several
    countries to be directed toward military defense.

7
The Growing Pressure to Internationalize
Political Decision Making 
  • Scientific and Technological innovation and the
    consequences of it have caused pressure to
    internationalize the political decision making
    process.
  •  
  • International Government Policy is being focused
    increasingly on issues engendered by scientific
    and technological activity.
  •  
  • Environmental Alteration (rain forest, acid
    rain, global warming)
  • Population Control
  • Outer Space
  • Food
  • Discuss Montreal Protocol and Kyoto Accord

8
International Economic Relations
  • Technology Transfer
  •  
  • 1. Technology transfer within the disciplines of
    Science and Technology
  •  
  • 2. Technology may be transferred within a
    societal level from one geographic location to
    another , usually for economic gain
  •  
  • 3. Technology may be transferred from one
    societal level to another societal level both
    intranationally and internationally, ostensibly
    for development.

9
Assumptions about the Transfer of Technology
  • 1. Any technology may be transferred, regardless
    of the definition used for Technology. Whether
    or not it should be transferred, however, is an
    entirely different matter.
  •  
  • 2. Regardless of the purpose of the transfer, a
    technology always involves the introduction of
    new technology to an area, place, position, or
    process where it was not previously being
    applied.
  •  
  • 3. By its very definition, a transfer will
    result in a change in process, product, power,
    attitude, desires, etc.
  •  
  • 4. For a transfer of technology to be viable in
    a new situation, a process of adoption and
    diffusion is necessary.

10
Profiles of Adopter Types
  • 1. Innovators First individuals to adopt
  • 2. Early adopters Younger, more educated, many
    are leaders in the community.
  • 3. Early Majority First large group of
    adopters usually represents the upper middle
    class of the community
  • 4. Majority This group represents the middle
    class of a local society and constitutes the
    followers rather than the leaders. This group
    accepts a new or transferred technology only
    after it has been established as significantly
    better than older technology.
  • 5. Non-adaptors Outside the mainstream of
    society, steadfastly adhere to old methods even
    though another may be undeniably better.

11
Technology Transfer Problems
  • 1. Technology and Technics
  •  
  • 2. The Embeddedness of Technology
  •  
  • 3. Incompatibility of Transferred Technic and
    SCES of Recipient
  •  
  • 4. Terms of Transfer

12
Social Relations
  • Alex Inkles seven concepts for characterizing
    emerging social structures.
  •  
  • Autarky self contained, self sustaining,
    sociocultural system
  •  
  • Interconnectedness frequency of communication
    interaction. Communications and Transportation
    led to exponential increase in worldwide
    interconnectedness.
  •  
  • Dependence Reliance on item exchange that is
    more or less indispensable to the survival of a
    system. U.S. reliance on Middle East oil.
  •  
  • Integration formerly autonomous unit surrenders
    vital function to another
  • Hegemony forced integration - colonialism
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