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Summary Understanding Social Constructivism: Norms, Identity, and State Behavior

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This document explores the theory of social constructivism in international relations and law. It focuses on how ideas, norms, and identities shape the behavior of states, rather than only material power or economic interests. The discussion highlights key concepts such as shared understanding, social interaction, and norm development, explaining how international reality is socially constructed over time.

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What is Social Constructivism?

Social constructivism is the idea that many things we take as natural or given in society are
actually created through social interaction, shared meanings, language, and norms.

In simple terms:

Reality doesn’t just exist out there; we collectively make sense of it together.

Core idea

Knowledge, identities, values, and even “truth” are socially constructed, not simply
discovered.

It is most closely associated with the work of Soviet psychologist Lev Vygotsky (1896–1934),
whose ideas were developed in the 1920s–1930s but gained widespread influence decades
later.



Core Assumptions of Social Constructivism

Understanding over explanation

Social constructivists prioritise understanding social and political action rather than
explaining outcomes through strict causal laws. Influenced by Max Weber, they focus on
actors’ subjective meanings, motives, and worldviews.

2.Mutual constitution of structure and agency

Structures (e.g., norms, institutions) and agents (e.g., states, individuals) are
interdependent. Structures emerge from and are reproduced by agents' practices, but this
reproduction also allows for potential change, making most social relations relatively
stable yet transformable.

3.Use of critical realism

Social constructivists infer the existence of unobservable structures (e.g., underlying
social rules) from their observable effects. These structures influence but do not strictly
determine outcomes (distinct from IR realism/neo-realism).

4.Central role of norms

Behavior in international politics is guided not only by material interests but by shared
norms of acceptable conduct in international society. Norms are inherently social (existing

, beyond individuals), distinguishing them from individual ideas/beliefs (more aligned with
cognitive approaches).

5.Importance of institutions

Institutions include both formal (e.g., states, treaties, organizations with explicit rules) and
informal (stable, repeated patterns of practice, e.g., roles in families or diplomatic
routines). The boundary between norms and informal institutions can be blurry.

6.Processes of institutionalization and socialization

Key analytical focuses include how patterns of practice develop (institutionalization) and
how actors (e.g., new EU member states) adopt or adapt norms and behaviors
(socialization). This applies to phenomena like European integration, where everyday
routines and shared practices matter as much as formal rules.

7.Interests are not fixed or taken for granted

Interests are socially constructed through interaction with norms, institutions, and ideas.
Constructivists examine:

How interests are formed/shaped by these ideational factors.

The reciprocal interplay: interests also influence which ideas or norms gain prominence.

8.Discourse as central

Discourse (broadly communication) is the primary medium through which identities,
interests, norms, and institutions are constituted, reproduced, and made visible. It enables
intersubjective understandings (shared, collective meanings, drawing from Habermas) —
neither purely objective nor subjective, but conventions accepted across actors.

In essence, social constructivism positions itself in the "middle ground" between structure-
centered and agency-centered theories, materialism and idealism, and objectivism and
subjectivism. It highlights the socially constructed, ideational, and intersubjective nature
of international reality, where shared meanings, norms, discourse, and practices shape
(and can reshape) actors' identities, interests, and behaviors.



Criticisms of Social Constructivism

Social constructivism occupies a "middle ground" in the fourth debate in IR theory.

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