About these notes. This is the sub-topic lookup version. For the full narrative lesson, use the Walk-through. For active recall, use the MCQ Quiz.
Likely exam angles. What kind of power matters most today, and how is it distributed? The topic is the conceptual core of Paper 3B and is tested through Q3 and synoptically across the paper.
Robert Dahl's shorthand - power is the ability to get others to do something they would not otherwise do - is the starting point. The five Edexcel theorists to know across the topic are Nye (hard/soft/smart), Strange (structural), Waltz and Mearsheimer (realist state power) and Fukuyama (development and liberal democracy).
| Type | What it is | Key thinker and example |
|---|---|---|
| Hard | Coercion and inducement - military force, sanctions, conditional aid, frozen assets. | Waltz and Mearsheimer (realists): power as material capability. Russia's 2022 invasion of Ukraine is the bluntest current use. |
| Soft | Attraction and emulation - culture, political values, foreign policy others want to be associated with. | Nye (coined 1990): South Korea's K-pop strategy; states queuing to join the EU. |
| Structural | Rule-setting - shaping the frameworks others operate within. Strange's four faces: security, production, finance, knowledge. | Strange (1988): the dollar's role in global finance is structural power at work. |
| Smart | The deliberate combination of hard and soft tools in one strategy. | Nye's later term: the Western response to Russia in 2022 - sanctions plus arms plus coalition-building. |
Development asks how states and peoples move from poverty toward prosperity, and by what measures. Fukuyama's "end of history" thesis argued liberal democracy and the market were the endpoint of political development - a claim the rise of authoritarian China and democratic backsliding have since challenged.