ABSTRACT

Observing International Relations draws upon the modern systems theory of society, developed by Niklas Luhmann, to provide new perspectives on central aspects of contemporary world society and to generate theoretically informed insights on the possibilities and limits of regulation in global governance.

The authors develop a Luhmannian theory of world society by contrasting it with competing notions of international society, critically discussing the use of modern systems theory in international relations theory and assessing its treatment of central concepts within international relations, such as power, sovereignty, governance and war.

chapter |10 pages

Introduction

part |46 pages

Luhmann and IR

chapter |17 pages

On the Modern Systems Theory of society and IR

Contacts and disjunctures between different kinds of theorizing

chapter |13 pages

“Corpus mysticum”

Niklas Luhmann's evocation of world society

part |62 pages

Competing notions of world society and world society as the “largest social system possible”

part |107 pages

Bringing Modern Systems Theory to the study of IR

chapter |21 pages

Systems and sovereignty

A systems theoretical look at the transformation of sovereignty

chapter |20 pages

Society's war

The evolution of a self-referential military system

chapter |19 pages

Organizations in/and world society

A theoretical prolegomenon

chapter |12 pages

Governance in a world society

The perspective of systems theory

chapter |15 pages

Constructivism and International Relations

An analysis of Luhmann's conceptualization of power 1