نوع مقاله : مقاله پژوهشی
نویسندگان
1 نویسنده مسئول، استاد علوم سیاسی، گروه علوم سیاسی، دانشگاه مازندران، مازندران، ایران M.t.ghezel@gmail.com
2 دانشجوی دکتری علوم سیاسی، گروه علوم سیاسی، دانشگاه تربیت مدرس، تهران، ایرانmasoumeh.hosseini@modares.ac.ir
3 دانش آموخته ارشد روابط بین الملل، گروه علوم سیاسی، دانشگاه مازندران، مازندران، ایرانfrshthlayy49@gmail.com
چکیده
کلیدواژهها
عنوان مقاله [English]
نویسندگان [English]
Fear plays a decisive role in explaining political action in the contemporary international system as a central mechanism in developing threat perception. This study adopts an analytical-comparative approach and uses library research to examine the position and function of the “mechanism of fear” in the thought of Zbigniew Brzezinski and Samuel Huntington. The primary question is how fear is conceptualized within the theoretical framework of each thinker, at what level it is analyzed, and what behavioral consequences it entails when confronting emerging threats. The findings show that Brzezinski primarily formulates fear within the context of geopolitical competition and the anarchy of the international system, linking it to rational strategies such as the balance of power and deterrence. By contrast, Huntington conceives fear as an identity-based phenomenon, explaining its consequences in terms of identity politics and civilizational confrontation, focusing on cultural and civilizational conflicts. Overall, in both perspectives, fear constitutes a key mechanism for understanding and managing new threats.
Introduction
The emergence of new forms of threat has rendered contemporary international politics increasingly dependent on cognitive and conceptual mechanisms through which actors interpret security and insecurity. Meanwhile, fear functions as a central organizing force in global politics. It operates as a psychological response to external dangers and an analytical mechanism through which meaning is produced, threats are defined, and political action is directed. This study examines the role of fear in international politics through a comparative analysis of two influential theoretical frameworks: Zbigniew Brzezinski’s geopolitical approach and Samuel Huntington’s theory of the clash of civilizations. The central question concerns how fear is generated within each framework, the level or unit to which it is directed, and the implications it carries for responding to emerging threats. The study hypothesizes that divergences in the underlying mechanisms of fear between these two perspectives have produced distinct and, at times, competing interpretations of global politics.
Methodology
This study employs a qualitative-comparative approach based on examining Brzezinski’s and Huntington’s core theoretical works, along with relevant secondary interpretations. The comparative framework is structured around three analytical dimensions: the source of fear, the primary unit of analysis, and the political and behavioral consequences associated with fear. This structure is deliberately designed to move beyond a descriptive juxtaposition of theoretical differences and to focus instead on the internal mechanisms through which fear is generated and put to use. Within this framework, fear is treated as a conceptual variable embedded in the structure of the international system, collective identities, and patterns of political action. The comparative method makes it possible to examine, in a systematic and comparable manner, how each theory explains emerging threats and how fear operates within its analytical logic.
Results and Discussion
The comparative analysis shows that, within Brzezinski’s theoretical framework, fear stems from the anarchy of the international system and competition among great powers. States constitute the primary unit of analysis, while strategic geography plays a decisive role in generating fear. Concerns over strategic decline, rival expansion, and instability in critical regions function as mechanisms through which fear is translated into political action. This form of fear results in policies centered on the balance of power, alliance formation, and preemptive strategies to manage emerging threats. Even phenomena such as terrorism or regional instability are ultimately interpreted through the logic of geopolitical rivalry.
By contrast, Huntington’s theory conceptualizes fear as fundamentally identity-based. Here, its source lies not in material power structures but in cultural, value-based, and civilizational differences. The unit of analysis extends beyond states to civilizations and cultural fault lines. The civilizational “other” occupies a central position, and fear of confrontation with it is treated as the primary driver of future conflict. This mechanism leads to the acculturalization of conflict, the strengthening of identity politics, and the redefinition of security boundaries, whereby emerging threats are understood mainly as cultural and symbolic confrontations rather than purely strategic competitions.
Conclusion
The study concludes that fear plays a structural role in both theories of global politics, though its nature and function differ. Brzezinski’s geopolitical fear is more rational, calculable, and oriented toward power management, whereas Huntington’s identity-based fear is deeper, more pervasive, and less amenable to control through conventional foreign policy instruments. This distinction indicates that modern international threats emerge not only from power competition or identity conflict, but also from their interaction.
Research Contributions
The central contribution of this study lies in foregrounding fear as an analytical variable in theoretical comparison. By focusing on fear, the research offers a deeper understanding of how threat perceptions are formed in international relations theory. Moreover, by linking Huntington’s notion of the “civilizational Other” to Brzezinski’s geopolitical logic, the study enriches comparative global politics and proposes a conceptual framework for analyzing emerging threats.
کلیدواژهها [English]