New Books in Political Science

Rachel Myrick, "Polarization and International Politics: How Extreme Partisanship Threatens Global Stability" (Princeton UP, 2025)

9 snips
Nov 1, 2025
Rachel Myrick, the Douglas & Ellen Lowey Associate Professor of Political Science at Duke University, discusses her book on polarization's impact on international politics. She reveals how extreme partisanship undermines democracies' advantages in foreign affairs, eroding stability and credibility. Myrick shares surprising insights on polarization's effects on institutions and predictability. She also explores mitigation strategies to insulate national security and highlights the relevance of her research amid current geopolitical tensions.
Ask episode
AI Snips
Chapters
Books
Transcript
Episode notes
INSIGHT

Why Study Polarization And International Politics

  • Polarization is recurrent across democracies and often overlooked in international-relations teaching.
  • This gap motivated integrating comparative, American, and IR work to study polarization's global effects.
INSIGHT

How Polarization Undermines Democratic Advantages

  • Polarization erodes democracies' vertical and horizontal constraints that produce foreign-policy advantages.
  • This erosion undermines stability, credibility, and reliability in international affairs.
INSIGHT

Three Core Democratic Foreign-Policy Benefits

  • Democracies normally gain stability, credibility, and reliability from domestic constraints.
  • Polarization weakens those constraints and reduces these comparative foreign-policy benefits.
Get the Snipd Podcast app to discover more snips from this episode
Get the app