Against International Relations Norms

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Adalet Ve Kalkinma Partisi
Anthea Vogl
Arjun Chowdhury
Ayse Zarakol
Category=JPA
Category=JPS
Charmaine Chua
Colonial Episteme
colonial legacies in IR scholarship
Colonial Rationality
Congo Reform Movement
critical constructivism
critical introduction
David L. Blaney
David T. Smith
decolonising international politics
epistemic violence
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eq_nobargain
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global power asymmetries
Indigenous Land Title
International Relations and Colonial Questions
International Whaling Commission
interventions
Julia Gallagher
Naeem Inayatullah
Norm Entrepreneurs
Norm Subsidiarity
Norms Constructivism
norms in international relations
Offshore Processing
Offshore Processing Centre
Pacific Solution
Post Colonial Subjectivity
post-Eurocentric theory
Postcolonial Activists
Postcolonial Agencies
Postcolonial Present
Postcolonial Sovereignty
Postcolonial Sovereignty Games
Postcolonial Subjectivity
Postcolonial Subjects
Postcolonial Theory
Postcolonial World
Rebecca Adler-Nissen
Regional Processing Centre
Sarah Phillips
seth
shilliam
sovereignty critique
Sovereignty Games
Ulrik Pram Gad
Unauthorised Maritime Arrival
Violent Non-state Actors
Vivienne Jabri
worlding beyond the west
Zeynep Gulsah Capan

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138955981
  • Weight: 580g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 04 May 2017
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This volume uses the concept of ‘norms’ to initiate a long overdue conversation between the constructivist and postcolonial scholarships on how to appraise the ordering processes of international politics. Drawing together insights from a broad range of scholars, it evaluates what it means to theorise international politics from a postcolonial perspective, understood not as a unified body of thought or a new ‘-ism’ for IR, but as a ‘situated perspective’ offering ex-centred, post-Eurocentric sites for practices of situated critique.

Through in-depth engagements with the norms constructivist scholarship, the contributors expose the theoretical, epistemological and practical erasures that have been implicitly effected by the uncritical adoption of ‘norms’ as the dominant lens for analysing the ideational dynamics of international politics. They show how these are often the very erasures that sustained the workings of colonisation in the first place, whose uneven power relations are thereby further sustained by the study of international politics.

The volume makes the case for shifting from a static analysis of ‘norms’ to a dynamic and deeply historical understanding of the drawing of the initial line between the ‘normal’ and the ‘abnormal’ that served to exclude from focus the 'strange' and the unfamiliar that were necessarily brought into play in the encounters between the West and the rest of the world. A timely intervention, it will be of great interest to students and scholars of international relations, international relations theory and postcolonial scholarship.

Charlotte Epstein is Associate Professor in the Department of Government and International Relations at the University of Sydney, Australia.