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Applying the tools of complexity to the international realm: from fitness landscapes to complexity cascades

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<mark>Journal publication date</mark>03/2011
<mark>Journal</mark>Cambridge Review of International Affairs
Issue number1
Volume24
Number of pages21
Pages (from-to)5-26
Publication StatusPublished
<mark>Original language</mark>English

Abstract

Increasingly, complexity-based thinking is challenging the dominant rationalist, realist and reductionist international relations (IR) framework. However, to move this challenge beyond the academic realm and into the day-to-day world of policy, complexity thinkers must begin to develop useful tools for policy practitioners. This paper attempts to address this issue by demonstrating the weaknesses and limits of one traditional IR tool (X–Y graphic visualizations) and the strengths of complexity tools (the fitness landscape and range of complexity outcomes). To demonstrate these arguments we examine how fitness landscapes can be used to reinterpret traditional perspectives on development and conflict and make difficult problems more approachable through three-dimensional visualizations.