TL;DR: Most students fail International Relations not because the material is too hard, but because they try to memorise theories instead of applying them. The fix: every time you encounter a real-world event, explain it through at least two competing paradigms. That habit separates students who scrape a pass from those who write first-class essays.
International Relations sits at an uncomfortable intersection: it's part political science, part history, part philosophy, and part current affairs. Students often come in expecting something like geography or politics, and discover a discipline that demands they hold multiple, fundamentally contradictory worldviews in their heads at once — and argue fluently from all of them.
The most common study mistake is passive reading. Students highlight Waltz, summarise Keohane, copy definitions of 'anarchy' and 'relative gains,' and then wonder why their essays feel thin. Dunlosky et al. (2013) found that highlighting and re-reading are among the least effective study strategies, producing an illusion of familiarity without genuine understanding. In IR, this is especially damaging because the exam doesn't ask you to recall — it asks you to apply and evaluate.
The second big trap is treating paradigms (realism, liberalism, constructivism, and their variants) as static categories to memorise rather than lenses to actively use. You'll never be asked to list the tenets of offensive realism in a vacuum. You'll be asked: 'Does realism adequately explain the expansion of NATO?' Now you need to deploy the framework under pressure.
The good news: International Relations is inherently fascinating, and the right study techniques work with the subject's structure rather than against it.
Active recall — retrieving information from memory rather than re-reading — is one of the highest-utility study strategies identified by Dunlosky et al. (2013). For IR, you need to make it paradigm-first.
How to do it: Close your notes. Pick a current event (a conflict, a summit, a sanctions package). Write a paragraph explaining it from a realist perspective — states as rational, self-interested actors, security dilemma, relative gains. Then write the same event through a liberal lens — interdependence, institutions, absolute gains. Then constructivist — norms, identity, socialisation. Compare.
This forces deep encoding rather than surface-level memorisation. A good starting set: Russia-Ukraine conflict, China's Belt and Road Initiative, WTO disputes, and US-China trade tensions. Run all four paradigms on each event.
Spaced repetition — reviewing material at increasing intervals — is one of the most robustly supported memory techniques in cognitive science (Cepeda et al., 2006). For IR, the most efficient application is through paradigm comparison tables.
How to do it: Create a master comparison chart with rows for each major theory (Classical Realism, Neorealism, Liberal Institutionalism, Neoliberalism, Constructivism, English School, Marxism/Critical Theory) and columns for key dimensions: view of the state, main unit of analysis, cause of conflict, role of institutions, and view of cooperation. Leave it blank. Once a week, fill it from memory without looking at notes. Check your answers. Fill in the gaps. Repeat.
After three weeks of this, you'll be able to write comparison sections of essay plans in minutes — a genuine exam advantage, especially for university IR finals and A-Level Politics long-answer questions.
This is the technique that separates IR students who understand the subject from those who merely know it. The BBC World Service, Foreign Affairs, and The Economist all publish daily material that is, in effect, IR case studies in real time.
How to do it: Spend 10-15 minutes per day reading one international news story. As you read, ask: What would a realist say is driving this? What does this tell us about the role of international institutions? Are norms shifting here? Keep a running document — one paragraph per story, one analytical question per paragraph. Over a semester, you'll have 50+ case studies you've personally analysed. These become your essay examples.
This approach is particularly important if you're preparing for the international section of the AP Government exam or dissertation-level work, where examiners reward students who move fluidly between theory and contemporary evidence.
Grand theory is only convincing when grounded in historical evidence. The classic IR case studies — the Concert of Europe, Wilsonian internationalism, the origins of the Cold War, the failure of the League of Nations, the Cuban Missile Crisis, and the post-1945 liberal international order — appear repeatedly in top-tier IR essays because they're genuinely contested ground. Realists, liberals, and constructivists all have competing accounts of each.
How to do it: Pick one major case study per week during the semester. Write a 400-word analysis from each major paradigm's perspective. Then write a 200-word evaluation: which account is most persuasive, and why? File these. By exam time, you'll have a personalised case study bank covering the majority of likely essay questions.
For UK A-Level Politics students covering international relations topics, the Thucydides Trap and the post-Cold War 'unipolar moment' debates are particularly high-yield.
International Relations is an essay-discipline. The final exam, almost universally, will be an essay. That means the best practice is writing essays under time pressure — not re-reading, not making flashcards about paradigms, but actually producing analytical prose.
How to do it: Find past papers for your specific exam (university IR finals, A-Level Politics, or the AP Government free-response section). Set a timer. Write. Then compare your answer against model essays — not to copy the structure, but to identify where your argument weakened, where you failed to define terms, or where you made claims without evidence.
Aim for one practice essay per week from Week 4 onward in a typical semester. Students who do this consistently improve their essay scores by an average of one full grade band by finals.
International Relations rewards consistency over cramming. Here's a practical weekly framework for a university student taking a semester-long IR module:
Weeks 1-4 (Foundation):
Weeks 5-9 (Application):
Weeks 10-12 (Exam prep):
Start exam prep no later than three weeks before finals. For university IR, students who begin structured revision two weeks before typically run out of time to cover all paradigms in sufficient depth.
Memorising theory without using it. Knowing that 'neorealism holds that the structure of the international system causes state behaviour' gets you one mark. Deploying that idea to explain why Germany rearmed in the 1930s or why China is building islands in the South China Sea gets you six.
Treating paradigms as teams to pick. The most sophisticated IR essays don't pick a side — they evaluate the explanatory power of multiple theories against the evidence. Students who default to 'I'm a realist' produce one-dimensional arguments. Learn to be fluent in all of them.
Ignoring the English School and Critical Theory. Realism and liberalism dominate most intro courses, which means students who engage seriously with Hedley Bull, Gramsci, or feminist IR stand out sharply in upper-level courses and dissertations. If your syllabus includes them, don't skip them.
Cramming essay structure the night before. IR exams reward deep, structured thinking that takes months to develop. The students who write fluent exam essays are the ones who've been practising since Week 4.
Core texts worth owning:
Online resources:
AI study tools: Upload your International Relations notes to Snitchnotes — it generates paradigm-comparison flashcards and practice essay questions in seconds. Especially useful for drilling the definitions and key arguments you need to deploy fluently in timed exams.
How many hours should I study International Relations per day?
For a standard university IR module, 1.5-2 hours of focused study per day outside class is sustainable and sufficient if you're using active techniques. Passive reading for 4 hours produces less learning than 90 minutes of paradigm application and essay practice. Consistency across the semester beats last-minute cramming every time.
What's the best way to remember all the different IR theories?
Build a paradigm comparison chart and fill it from memory weekly. After three to four weeks, the structure becomes automatic. Focus on understanding why each theory differs — realists distrust cooperation because of relative gains concerns; liberals don't because they focus on absolute gains. The logic is more memorable than the labels.
How do I study for university IR finals or A-Level Politics?
Start with past papers — they reveal exactly which paradigm comparisons and case studies appear most frequently. Build a case study bank of 6-8 historical and contemporary examples you can deploy fluently. Write at least three timed practice essays before the exam and get feedback if possible. Review your paradigm comparison charts weekly using spaced repetition.
Is International Relations hard?
IR is conceptually demanding but not mathematically difficult. The challenge is developing the ability to hold multiple competing worldviews simultaneously and argue analytically rather than descriptively. With consistent practice — especially regular essay writing and theory application to news events — most students find it manageable and genuinely engaging.
Can I use AI to study International Relations?
Absolutely. IR is a subject where AI tools are particularly useful — you can upload your lecture notes to Snitchnotes to generate practice questions and paradigm-comparison flashcards. You can also use AI to get instant feedback on essay drafts or explore how different theories apply to a specific case study. Use it to deepen your thinking, not replace it.
International Relations rewards students who engage with it actively and analytically. The paradigms aren't categories to memorise — they're lenses to wield. The historical case studies aren't background noise — they're your essay ammunition. The daily news isn't a distraction from study — it's the subject itself, unfolding in real time.
Use active recall over re-reading. Build your paradigm comparison charts and review them weekly with spaced repetition. Write practice essays from Week 4. Follow international news and ask 'what would a realist say?' every single day.
If you want a shortcut to building your revision materials, Snitchnotes can turn your IR lecture notes into flashcards and practice questions instantly — letting you spend your time actually applying the theory rather than organising it.
References:
Dunlosky, J., Rawson, K. A., Marsh, E. J., Nathan, M. J., & Willingham, D. T. (2013). Improving students' learning with effective learning techniques. Psychological Science in the Public Interest, 14(1), 4–58.
Cepeda, N. J., Pashler, H., Vul, E., Wixted, J. T., & Rohrer, D. (2006). Distributed practice in verbal recall tasks. Psychological Bulletin, 132(3), 354–380.
Waltz, K. N. (1979). Theory of International Politics. Addison-Wesley.
Keohane, R. O., & Nye, J. S. (1977). Power and Interdependence. Little, Brown.
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