
New Books Network Rachel Myrick, "Polarization and International Politics: How Extreme Partisanship Threatens Global Stability" (Princeton UP, 2025)
Nov 1, 2025
Rachel Myrick, a Duke University political science professor, discusses her book on polarization's impact on international politics. She reveals how extreme partisanship threatens democratic advantages in foreign affairs. Myrick outlines the methodologies used in her research, including innovative data collection and analysis. Surprisingly, she shares non-ideological pathways that polarization affects global stability. She also emphasizes practical strategies for mitigating polarization's harmful effects on policy, making her insights timely and essential.
AI Snips
Chapters
Books
Transcript
Episode notes
Origin: A Gap Between IR And Polarization Studies
- The book grew from noticing a gap between polarization research and international relations teaching.
- Myrick saw polarization everywhere but little integration into IR courses, which sparked the project.
Polarization Undermines Democratic Advantages
- Polarization erodes democratic advantages by weakening vertical and horizontal constraints on leaders.
- This undermines stability, credibility, and reliability in democratic foreign policy.
Three Core Democratic Advantages
- Democracies gain a stability, credibility, and reliability edge in international affairs from domestic constraints.
- Polarization specifically threatens each of these three advantages.

