With a view to providing contextual background for the Special Issue, this opening article analyses several dimensions of βThe end of International Relations theory?β It opens with a consideration of the status of different types of theory. Thereafter, we look at the proliferation of theories that h
In the beginning: The International Relations enlightenment and the ends of International Relations theory
β Scribed by Williams, M. C.
- Book ID
- 121448860
- Publisher
- SAGE Publications
- Year
- 2013
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 759 KB
- Volume
- 19
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1354-0661
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
The question of endings is simultaneously a question of beginnings: wondering if International Relations is at an end inevitably raises the puzzle of when and how βitβ began. This article argues that International Relationsβ origins bear striking resemblance to a wider movement in post-war American political studies that Ira Katznelson calls the βpolitical studies enlightenment.β This story of the fieldβs beginnings and ends has become so misunderstood as to have almost disappeared from histories of the field and accounts of its theoretical orientations and alternatives. This historical forgetting represents one of the most debilitating errors of International Relations theory today, and overcoming it has significant implications for how we think about the past and future development of the field. In particular, it throws open not only our understanding of the place of realism in International Relations, but also our vision of liberalism. For the realism of the International Relations enlightenment did not seek to destroy liberalism as an intellectual and political project, but to save it. The core issue in the βinvention of International Relations theoryβ β its historical origins as well as its end or goal in a substantive or normative sense β was not the assertion of realism in opposition to liberalism: it was, in fact, the defence of a particular kind of liberalism.
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