ISBN-13: 9783031308826 / Angielski
My aim in this book is to offer preliminary steps in developing a better field for identity research in the discipline of international relations (IR). That requires a mapping exercise to clarify the foundations of the varieties of identity-based research in the discipline. That is, to achieve my goal, I need to begin by addressing two reflexive questions: How has identity been understood, theorized, and analyzed in IR? How can we make further progress if the discipline’s identity scholarship remains divided and incoherent? In addressing those questions, I develop a typology of identity research with a focus on ontology. That is, my typology maps not only the analytical, theoretical, and epistemological orientations of identity research, but also, and more importantly, its ontological underpinnings. This typological map deepens our understanding of identity-based studies in IR, which are currently reviewed mainly from thematic and conceptual or paradigmatic perspectives.
My aim in this book is to offer preliminary steps in developing a better field for identity research in the discipline of international relations (IR). That requires a mapping exercise to clarify the foundations of the varieties of identity-based research in the discipline. That is, to achieve my goal, I need to begin by addressing two reflexive questions: How has identity been understood, theorized, and analyzed in IR? How can we make further progress if the discipline’s identity scholarship remains divided and incoherent? In addressing those questions, I develop a typology of identity research with a focus on ontology. That is, my typology maps not only the analytical, theoretical, and epistemological orientations of identity research, but also, and more importantly, its ontological underpinnings. This typological map deepens our understanding of identity-based studies in IR, which are currently reviewed mainly from thematic and conceptual or paradigmatic perspectives.