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Political learning by doing: Gorbachev as uncommitted thinker and motivated learner

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 May 2009

Janice Gross Stein
Affiliation:
Harrowstein Professor of Conflict Management and Negotiation, Department of Political Science, University of Toronto, Canada.
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Abstract

The direction and scope of the change in Soviet foreign policy after 1985 cannot be explained without reference to the impact of Gorbachev's representation of the Soviet security problem. Changes in the international distribution of capabilities and generational change are indeterminate explanations of the changes in Soviet foreign policy. Building on propositions from social cognition and organizational psychology, I argue that through inductive “trial-and-error learning” from failure, Gorbachev developed a new representation of the “ill-structured” Soviet security problem. Gorbachev learned in part because he was a relatively uncommitted thinker on security issues and was open to the ideas of experts. He was also highly motivated to learn because of his commitment to domestic reform. The complex interactive relationship between learning and action that provided quick feedback is captured by the social cognition of “learning by doing.” The conditionality of political learning suggests a rich research agenda for the analysis of foreign policy change.

Type
Symposium: The end of the cold war and theories of international relations
Copyright
Copyright © The IO Foundation 1994

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References

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82. See Thomas Risse-Kappen, “Ideas Do Not Float Freely: Transnational Coalitions, Domestic Structures, and the End of the Cold War,” in this issue of International Organization; and Mendelson, “Internal Battles and External Wars.”

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93. Gorbachev also institutionalized an informal advisory system that provided a wider flow of ideas and critical advice on security issues. Although Andropov, and at times Brezhnev, had occasionally engaged in private discussions with institute officials, Gorbachev created bodies of experts from the institutes, the press, and the ministries and met frequently to ask their advice and opinions. He made almost no major decision without expert advice. Based on personal interview with Pavel Palazchenko, Gorbachev's long-standing interpreter, Toronto, 1 April 1993.

94. In a complementary stream of evidence, research in cognitive psychology suggests that at times behavior leads to changes in schema as people make inferences from their behavior about their convictions. See Salanick, Gerald R. and Conway, Mary, “Attitude Inference from Salient and Relevant Cognitive Content About Behavior,” Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 32 (11 1975), pp. 829–40CrossRefGoogle Scholar; and Zanna, Mark P., Olson, James M., and Fazio, Ralph H., “Attitude-Behavior Consistency: An Individual Difference Perspective,” Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 38 (03 1980), pp. 432–40CrossRefGoogle Scholar. Once people are convinced that their behavior has been shaped by their prior beliefs, those beliefs become even more important in shaping future behavior. Inference from behavior is a dominant cognitive mechanism in the early stages of development of beliefs and attitudes. See Bern, J. Daryl, “Self-Perception Theory,” in Berkowitz, Leonard, ed., Advances in Experimental Social Psychology, vol. 6 (New York: Academic Press, 1972), pp. 161Google Scholar; Fazio, R. H., Zanna, M. P., and Cooper, Joel, “Dissonance and Self-Perception: An Integrative View of Each Theory's Proper Domain of Application,” Journal of Experimental Social Psychology 13 (09 1977), pp. 464–79CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Nisbett, Richard E. and Valins, Stuart, “Perceiving the Causes of One's Own Behavior,” in Jones, Edward E., Knouse, David E., Kelley, Harold H., Nisbett, Richard E., Valins, Stuart, and Weiner, Bernard, eds., Attribution: Perceiving the Causes of Behavior (Morristown, N.J.: General Learning Press, 1971), pp. 6378Google Scholar; and Vertzberger, , The World in Their Minds, p. 169Google Scholar. Decision makers who have little prior experience develop their beliefs while on the job; their beliefs and attitudes can change as a result of the inferences they draw from their behavior.

95. Personal interview with Gorbachev.

96. Gorbachev, , Perestroika, p. 11Google Scholar.

97. See Thane Gustafson and Mann, Dawn, “Gorbachev's First Year: Building Power and Authority,” Problems of Communism 35 (0506 1986), pp. 119Google Scholar; and Hough, Jerry F., “Gorbachev Consolidating Power,” Problems of Communism 36 (0708 1987), pp. 169–70Google Scholar.

98. Andrew Bennett, Owen, “Patterns of Soviet Military Interventionism 1975–1990: Alternative Explanations and Their Implications,” in Zimmerman, William, ed., Beyond the Soviet Threat: American Security Policy in a New Era (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 1992), pp. 105–27Google Scholar.

99. See Haas, When Knowledge Is Power; and Ernest Haas, “Collective Learning: Some Theoretical Speculations,” inBreslauer, and Tetlock, , Learning in U.S. and Soviet Foreign Policy, pp. 6299Google Scholar. See also Etheredge, Lloyd, Can Governments Learn? (New York: Pergamon, 1985)Google Scholar; and March, James G. and Olsen, Johan P., “The Uncertainty of the Past: Organizational Learning Under Ambiguity,” in March, James G., ed., Decisions and Organizations (New York: Basil Blackwell, 1988), pp. 335–58Google Scholar.

100. Parrott, “Soviet National Security Under Gorbachev.”

101. Winter, Hermann, Weintraub, and Walker, “Theory and Predictions in Political Psychology.”

102. See Odell, John, U.S. International Monetary Policy: Markets, Power, and Ideas as a Source of Change (Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1982), pp. 367–76Google Scholar; and Haas, Peter, “Towards an Evolutionary Model of Institutional Learning: Ideas and Structuration,” paper presented at the annual meeting of the American Political Science Association, Washington, D.C., 1–4 11 1993Google Scholar.

103. For an analysis of part of this debate, see Rey Koslowski and Friedrich Kratochwil, “Understanding Change in International Politics: The Soviet Empire's Demise and the International System,” this issue of International Organization.