International politics

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International politics is the general term for the supranational political area, which is characterized by the relationships, norms and institutions that the states maintain with one another. In addition, the political science sub-discipline that deals with international relations and organizations, foreign policy, security policy and peace policy, as well as the development of related theories, is called International Politics (IP), but the name International Relations (IB ) enforced. At the congress of the German Political Science Association in Duisburg in 2015, its “International Politics Section” was renamed “International Relations Section”.

literature

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Individual evidence

  1. Definition according to Lemma Internationale Politik , Das Politiklexikon, Federal Center for Political Education
  2. It is customary to mark the political science sub-discipline “International Politics” or “International Relations” with upper case and its research subject “International Relations” or “International Politics” with the lower case of the adjective. So Frank Sauer and Carlo Masala (eds.): Handbook of international relations . 2nd Edition. Springer VS, Wiesbaden 2017, ISBN 978-3-531-19917-7 , S. V (foreword); Anja Jetschke: International Relations. An introduction . Narr Francke Attempto, Tübingen 2017, ISBN 978-3-8233-6744-4 , p. 119; Nicole Deitelhoff and Michael Zürn : Textbook of International Relations. The hitchhiker's guide to the IB galaxy . CH Beck, Munich S. 2016, ISBN 9783406654398 , S. 16 (Note 1); Siegfried Schieder , Manuela Spindler: Theories of International Relations. 3. Edition. Budrich, Opladen 2010, ISBN 978-3-8252-2315-1 , introduction, p. 9, note 1.
  3. ^ Frank Sauer and Carlo Masala (eds.): Handbook of international relations . 2nd Edition. Springer VS, Wiesbaden 2017, ISBN 978-3-531-19917-7 , S. V (foreword).