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E-grāmata: Uses of Iver Neumann: Nothing International is Alien

Edited by (University of Oslo, Norway), Edited by (University of Oslo, Norway), Edited by (Norwegian Institute of International Affairs (NUPI), Norway)
  • Formāts: 166 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 18-Nov-2024
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781040256251
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  • Formāts: 166 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 18-Nov-2024
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781040256251

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"This book engages with the work of Iver B. Neumann, demonstrating the past, present, and future importance of his work as a central IR scholar who set a path for younger researchers to make sense of international relations beyond traditional bounds. By closely examining his work, some of the leading contemporary political scientists reflect on the eclecticism that embodies Neumann's theorisation. Expert contributors engage in a critical review of his work on identity, practice theory, discourse, knowledge production, mentoring, and methodology, looking beyond the person to say something about the state of the field and the craft of research altogether. These reflections engage in critical assessment of the state of International Relations as a discipline, taking stock of theoretical and methodological challenges that scholars face, and reviewing the changes and continuities in knowledge production within social sciences. This book would be of interest to students, researchers, and educators working on themes of diplomacy, anthropology, popular culture, identity, foreign policy, and knowledge production and introducing them to the state of the discipline, key texts, and key developments over the past thirty years"--

This book engages with the work of a Iver B. Neumann, demonstrating the past, present, and future importance of his work as a central IR scholar who set a path for younger researchers to make sense of international relations beyond traditional bounds.



This book engages with the work of Iver B. Neumann, demonstrating the past, present, and future importance of his work as a central IR scholar who set a path for younger researchers to make sense of international relations beyond traditional bounds.

By closely examining his work, some of the leading contemporary political scientists reflect on the eclecticism that embodies Neumann’s theorisation. Expert contributors engage in a critical review of his work on identity, practice theory, discourse, knowledge production, mentoring, and methodology, looking beyond the person to say something about the state of the field and the craft of research altogether. These reflections engage in critical assessment of the state of International Relations as a discipline, taking stock of theoretical and methodological challenges that scholars face, and reviewing the changes and continuities in knowledge production within social sciences.

This book would be of interest to students, researchers, and educators working on themes of diplomacy, anthropology, popular culture, identity, foreign policy, and knowledge production and introducing them to the state of the discipline, key texts, and key developments over the past 30 years.

List of Contributors



Introduction: Of nomadism, diplomacy and the duty of not becoming a one-trick
pony

Halvard Leira, Alireza Shams Lahijani & Einar Wigen



Of Selves and Others

Jens Bartelson



Folk Models of International Relations

Rebecca Adler-Nissen



The Neumannian Methodology

Morten Skumsrud Andersen, Kristin Haugevik & Jon Harald Sande Lie



Iver, the feminist

Ann E. Towns



Normative Trade-offs in the Study of Self and Other IR

Bahar Rumelili



The unlikely poststructuralist

Thomas Hylland Eriksen



Kira at Bashi

Patrick Thaddeus Jackson & Daniel H. Nexon



The attentive observer: Iver Neumann's Work on and from Russia

Anatoly Reshetnikov



Self and Iver: The Young Neumann in the Making

Nina Gręger, Benjamin de Carvalho & Karsten Friis



Wager upon wager: Assessing Iver B. Neumanns Contribution to International
Relations

Vincent Pouliot & Ole Jacob Sending



Response

Iver B. Neumann

Index
Halvard Leira is Research Director and Research Professor at the Norwegian Institute of International Affairs (NUPI). He has published extensively in English and Norwegian on international political thought, historiography, foreign policy, and diplomacy.

Alireza Shams Lahijani is a Marie-Curie Postdoctoral Fellow at the University of Oslo, where he is researching the conceptual history of international order. His research revolves around the history of modern international society, focusing on themes of diplomacy, identity, and temporality.

Einar Wigen is Professor of Turkish Studies at the University of Oslo, where he works on political legitimacy and imperial legacies in Turkey, the Ottoman Empire, and the wider Turkic world.