Self-control of states: bridging social psychology to international relations discourses.

IF 2 Q2 SOCIOLOGY Frontiers in Sociology Pub Date : 2024-09-25 eCollection Date: 2024-01-01 DOI:10.3389/fsoc.2024.1426476
Bama Andika Putra
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Abstract

Why do states respond non-coercively in the face of crisis? Existing scholarship within international relations has stagnated in its conclusions regarding understanding this occurrence. This perspective article attempts to bridge the self-control theory of social psychology to provide a more nuanced understanding of why states self-refrain themselves from taking aggressive retaliatory foreign policies in state-to-state crises. It argues the importance of cognitive-affective units, such as encodings, expectancies, beliefs, goals, values, and self-regulatory plans, as the sociological interpretation of why states are committed to pursuing delayed rewards. It builds upon existing sociological theories adopted in international relations scholarship, such as state identities and role conceptions, and further considers the social psychology variables detrimental in self-control theories, and argues for its relevance to decompose the ability of a state to prioritize delayed gratification over immediate awards in tensions faced.

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国家的自我控制:社会心理学与国际关系论述之间的桥梁。
为什么国家在面对危机时会做出非胁迫性的反应?国际关系领域的现有学术研究对这一现象的理解停滞不前。这篇视角独特的文章试图以社会心理学的自我控制理论为桥梁,对国家间危机中国家为何自我克制,不采取侵略性报复外交政策提供更细致的理解。文章论证了认知-情感单元(如编码、预期、信念、目标、价值观和自我调节计划)的重要性,以此从社会学角度解释国家为何致力于追求延迟回报。它以国际关系学术界采用的现有社会学理论为基础,如国家身份和角色概念,并进一步考虑了自我控制理论中不利的社会心理学变量,论证了其在分解国家在面临紧张局势时优先考虑延迟满足而非立即奖励的能力方面的相关性。
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来源期刊
Frontiers in Sociology
Frontiers in Sociology Social Sciences-Social Sciences (all)
CiteScore
3.40
自引率
4.00%
发文量
198
审稿时长
14 weeks
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