Re-Thinking International Relations Theory via Deconstruction

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agent-structure debate
Arbitrary Exercise
Arfi
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Autoimmune Logic
Binding Institutions
Caputo 1997a
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Category=JPS
Ceteris Paribus Clause
critical international theory
Critical Theory
Deconstruction
Derrida
Derrida 1992a
Derrida 2005c
Derrida 2007b
Derridean analysis
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Formal Pragmatics
Ideal Speech Situation
Impossible Politics
International Relations Theory
Interventions
IR Literature
IR Research
IR Work
Non-originary Origin
ontological politics
Originary Violence
Past Element
Performative Contradiction
Philosophical Ontology
philosophy of science
pluralist epistemology
Possibility Condition
poststructuralist approaches to IR
Rational Reconstruction
Real Negativity
Structural Undecidability
Trust Qua
Vice Versa

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415783606
  • Weight: 630g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 13 Mar 2012
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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International Relations (IR) theorists have ceaselessly sought to understand, explain, and transform the experienced reality of international politics. Running through all these attempts is a persistent, yet unquestioned, quest by theorists to develop strategies to eliminate or reduce the antinomies, contradictions, paradoxes, dilemmas, and inconsistencies dogging their approaches. A serious critical assessment of the logic behind these strategies is however lacking. This new work addresses this issue by seeking to reformulate IR theory in an original way.

Arfi begins by providing a thorough critique of leading contemporary IR theories, including pragmatism, critical/scientific realism, rationalism, neo-liberal institutionalism and social-constructivism, and then moves on to strengthen and go beyond the valuable contributions of each approach by employing the logic of deconstruction pioneered by Derrida to explicate the consequences of taking into account the dilemmas and inconsistencies of these theories. The book demonstrates that the logic of deconstruction is resourceful and rigorous in its questioning of the presuppositions of prevailing IR approaches, and argues that relying on deconstruction leads to richer and more powerfully insightful pluralist IR theories and is an invaluable resource for taking IR theory beyond currently paralyzing ‘wars of paradigms’.

Questioning universally accepted presuppositions in existing theories, this book provides an innovative and exciting contribution to the field, and will be of great interest to scholars of international relations theory, critical theory and international relations.

Badredine Arfi is associate professor of political science at the University of Florida. His research interests include international relations theory and deconstruction. He has published articles in Millennium, International Political Sociology, and International Political Theory.