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What's the Point of International Relations? [Hardback]

Edited by (University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia.), Edited by (University of Sussex, UK), Edited by (University of Sussex, UK)
  • Formāts: Hardback, 288 pages, height x width: 234x156 mm, weight: 690 g
  • Izdošanas datums: 14-Feb-2017
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 1138707309
  • ISBN-13: 9781138707306
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  • Bibliotēkām
  • Formāts: Hardback, 288 pages, height x width: 234x156 mm, weight: 690 g
  • Izdošanas datums: 14-Feb-2017
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 1138707309
  • ISBN-13: 9781138707306
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:

What’s the Point of International Relations casts a critical eye on what it is that we think we are doing when we study and teach international relations (IR). It brings together many of IR’s leading thinkers to challenge conventional understandings of the discipline’s origins, history, and composition. It sees IR as a discipline that has much to learn from others, which has not yet lived up to its ambitions or potential, and where much work remains to be done. At the same time, it finds much that is worth celebrating in the discipline’s growing pluralism and views IR as a deeply political, critical, and normative pursuit.

The volume is divided into five parts:

• What is the point of IR?

• The origins of a discipline

• Policing the boundaries

• Engaging the world

• Imagining the future

Although each chapter alludes to and/or discusses central aspects of all of these components, each part is designed to capture the central thrust of the concerns of the contributors. Moving beyond western debate, orthodox perspectives, and uncritical histories this volume is essential reading for all scholars and advanced level students concerned with the history, development, and future of international relations.

 

Recenzijas

Enlightening self-reflection without unhelpful narcissism or drama! These are twenty smart, thoughtful, and really productive chapters. I learned things I will use in my classes and in my own work. - Robert A. Denemark, University of Delaware, USA

Through a collection of consistently excellent (and valuably divergent) chapters, this timely and provocative volume calls for and succeeds in modelling a pluralist, dialogical, and political discipline of IR. This is essential reading for anyone interested in the purposes of IR and how these relate to its contested past, current dynamism, and yet-uncertain future. - Toni Erskine, Professor of International Politics, UNSW, Australia

A wonderful collection of insightful essays that reveal why international relations has become one of the most exciting areas of academic work, one that has not only absorbed innovative perspectives from economics, politics, and political economy but is also becoming an influential source of ideas for these disciplines. - Walden Bello, State University of New York at Binghamton, USA

Weve needed this superb volume sorely for some time a collection of fresh and invigorating essays, all responding to the editors call for a newly open, political and humble approach to our discipline. IR emerges through this fresh look not as irrelevant or hamstrung by disciplinary limitations, but as vibrant, diverse and important, and, most of all, as having a very bright future. - Nicola Phillips, University of Sheffield, UK

'This is an excellent collection of essays on the current state of the field and, fortunately, much more oriented towards real-world problems than its title would suggest.' - Chris Brown, London School of Economics, UK

List of abbreviations
viii
About the contributors x
Acknowledgements xii
Introduction: asking questions of, and about, IR 1(18)
Synne L. Dyvik
Jan Selby
Rorden Wilkinson
PART ONE What's the point of IR?
19(50)
1 What's the point of IR? The international in the invention of humanity
21(13)
Ken Booth
2 Insecurity redux: the perennial problem of "the point of IR"
34(12)
Patrick Thaddeus Jackson
3 What's the point of IR? Or, we're so paranoid, we probably think this question is about us
46(11)
Cynthia Weber
4 In defense of IR
57(12)
Beate Jahn
PART TWO The origins of a discipline
69(50)
5 Relocating the point of IR in understanding industrial--age global problems
71(12)
Craig N. Murphy
6 Past as prefigurative prelude: feminist peace activists and IR
83(15)
Catia C. Confortini
7 Beyond practitioner histories of international relations: or, the stories that professors like to tell (about) themselves
98(9)
Robert Vitalis
8 How elite networks shape the contours of the discipline and what we might do about it
107(12)
Inderjeet Parmar
PART THREE Policing the boundaries
119(52)
9 Be careful what you wish for: positivism and the desire for relevance in the American study of IR
121(14)
Jennifer Sterling-Folker
10 Don't flatter yourself: world politics as we know it is changing and so must disciplinary IR
135(12)
L.H.M. Ling
11 Indian IR: older and newer orientations
147(12)
Achin Vanaik
12 Undisciplined IR: thinking without a net
159(12)
Laura Sjoberg
PART FOUR Engaging the world
171(46)
13 Mind the gap: defining and measuring policy engagement in IR
173(9)
Catherine Weaver
14 IR theory in the Anthropocene: time for a reality check?
182(11)
Stephanie Lawson
15 UN studies and IR: history, ideas, and problem-solving
193(12)
Thomas G. Weiss
16 Beyond the "Ivory Tower"? IR in the world
205(12)
Peter Newell
Anna Stavrianakis
PART FIVE Imagining the future
217(49)
17 Escaping from the prison of political science: what IR offers that other disciplines do not
219(12)
Justin Rosenberg
18 The future of feminist international relations
231(11)
Adrienne Roberts
19 A methodological turn long overdue: or, why it is time for critical scholars to cut their losses
242(11)
Samuel Knafo
20 Subverting the "international": imagining future as past
253(13)
Yongjin Zhang
Index 266
Synne L. Dyvik is Lecturer in International Relations at the University of Sussex, UK.

Jan Selby is Professor of International Relations at the University of Sussex, UK.

Rorden Wilkinson is Professor and Chair of the Department of International Relations at the University of Sussex, UK.