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Emergent actors in world politics : how states and nations develop and dissolve

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TLDR
Cedarman as mentioned in this paper argues that the dominant focus on cohesive nation-states as the only actors of world politics obscures crucial differences between the state and the nation; traditional theory usually treats these units as fixed.
Abstract
The disappearance and formation of states and nations after the end of the Cold War have proved puzzling to both theorists and policy-makers. Cedarman argues that this lack of conceptual preparation stems from two tendencies in conventional theorizing: firstly, the dominant focus on cohesive nation-states as the only actors of world politics obscures crucial differences between the state and the nation; secondly, traditional theory usually treats these units as fixed. This book presents complex adaptive systems modelling as a way of analyzing world politics. It provides a series of models, computerized thought-experiments, that separate the state from the nation and incorporate these as emergent rather than preconceived actors.

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International Norm Dynamics and Political Change

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The Institutional Dynamics of International Political Orders

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Cooperative Multi-Agent Learning: The State of the Art

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Journal ArticleDOI

What Makes the World Hang Together? Neo-utilitarianism and the Social Constructivist Challenge

TL;DR: Social constructivism addresses many of the same issues addressed by neo-utilitarianism, though from a different vantage and, therefore, with different effect as discussed by the authors. But it also concerns itself with issues that neo-UTilitarianism treats by assumption, discounts, ignores, or simply cannot apprehend within its characteristic ontology and/or epistemology.