The discipline of international relations (IR) is ironically not at all international. The study of international relations is conducted primarily from a specific geopolitical site (the United States) that happens to be the most powerful country in both international affairs and the discipline itself. To a significant degree, this influences the way the discipline sees the world and also how it contributes to policy making and thereby the shape of that world itself. This book is the second volume in a trilogy of titles that tries to put the international back into international relations by...
The discipline of international relations (IR) is ironically not at all international. The study of international relations is conducted primarily fro...
This book explores the possibilities of alternative worldings beyond those authorized by the disciplinary norms and customs of International Relations. In response to the boundary-drawing practices of IR that privilege the historical experience and scholarly folkways of the "West," the contributors examine the limits of even critical practice within the discipline; investigate alternative archives from India, the Caribbean, the steppes of Eurasia, the Andes, China, Japan and Southeast Asia that offer different understandings of proper rule, the relationality of identities and polities,...
This book explores the possibilities of alternative worldings beyond those authorized by the disciplinary norms and customs of International Relati...