Globalizing International Theory
The Problem with Western IR Theory and How to Overcome It
Herausgeber: Layug, A.; Hobson, John M
Globalizing International Theory
The Problem with Western IR Theory and How to Overcome It
Herausgeber: Layug, A.; Hobson, John M
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Globalizing International Theory adds to the literature on non-Western IR theory by probing the question of what it means to globalize international theory.
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Globalizing International Theory adds to the literature on non-Western IR theory by probing the question of what it means to globalize international theory.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Jenny Stanford Publishing
- Seitenzahl: 264
- Erscheinungstermin: 30. September 2022
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 18mm
- Gewicht: 567g
- ISBN-13: 9781032281889
- ISBN-10: 103228188X
- Artikelnr.: 64105154
- Verlag: Jenny Stanford Publishing
- Seitenzahl: 264
- Erscheinungstermin: 30. September 2022
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 18mm
- Gewicht: 567g
- ISBN-13: 9781032281889
- ISBN-10: 103228188X
- Artikelnr.: 64105154
A. Layug is a PhD Candidate in the School of Political Science and International Studies at the University of Queensland, Australia; research associate at the Fairbank Center for Chinese Studies at Harvard University, USA; and an associate at the Center for Global Knowledge Studies at the University of Cambridge, UK. His research interests include international theory, international security, global strategic thought/culture, global political theory, global intellectual history, theories of world order, international relations of the Global South, US and China's Grand Strategies, Islam, the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), and Philippine politics and foreign/security relations. John M. Hobson is Professor of Politics and International Relations at the University of Sheffield, UK, and is a Fellow of the British Academy. His research interests comprise the critique of Eurocentrism in international relations/international political economy with an emphasis on connected global historical sociologies.
Preface: Thickening International Theory or Shrinking the Shagreen Skin?
Acknowledgments 1. On the Road Toward a Globalized International Theory
Part 1. Racist/Eurocentric Foundations of IR, c.1850-2020: Why IR's
Conception of the International is Provincial and Thin 2. Beyond a 'More
International' International Relations 3. Un-veiling the Racist Foundations
of Modern Realist and Liberal IR Theory Part 2. Problematizing
International Theory: How and Why 'Bringing the Non-Western World In'
Overcomes the Thin Eurocentric Conception of the International 4.
Challenging the Illusion of Theoretical 'Internationalness' 5. Being
International and/or Global? 6. On the Logic of Non-Western Theoretical
Argument 7. Identity, Knowledge, Dialogue and the International Part 3.
Globalizing International Theory: Constructing a Non-Eurocentric Thick
Conception of the International 8. Ethno-Culturalism in World History:
Race, Identity and 'the Global' 9. Pluriversality in Islamic Political
Thought 10. International or Not, Being Human is Being 'Global'! 11.
Indigenous Disruptions: How Indigenous Self-Determination Practices Can
Deepen and Expand International Theory 12. International Theory and
Critique in Unusual Places: From Lusotropicalism to Anticolonial Poetics
Part 4. Conclusion: Reflections on Globalizing International Theory 13.
Thick/Thin as Multifaceted Metaphor
Acknowledgments 1. On the Road Toward a Globalized International Theory
Part 1. Racist/Eurocentric Foundations of IR, c.1850-2020: Why IR's
Conception of the International is Provincial and Thin 2. Beyond a 'More
International' International Relations 3. Un-veiling the Racist Foundations
of Modern Realist and Liberal IR Theory Part 2. Problematizing
International Theory: How and Why 'Bringing the Non-Western World In'
Overcomes the Thin Eurocentric Conception of the International 4.
Challenging the Illusion of Theoretical 'Internationalness' 5. Being
International and/or Global? 6. On the Logic of Non-Western Theoretical
Argument 7. Identity, Knowledge, Dialogue and the International Part 3.
Globalizing International Theory: Constructing a Non-Eurocentric Thick
Conception of the International 8. Ethno-Culturalism in World History:
Race, Identity and 'the Global' 9. Pluriversality in Islamic Political
Thought 10. International or Not, Being Human is Being 'Global'! 11.
Indigenous Disruptions: How Indigenous Self-Determination Practices Can
Deepen and Expand International Theory 12. International Theory and
Critique in Unusual Places: From Lusotropicalism to Anticolonial Poetics
Part 4. Conclusion: Reflections on Globalizing International Theory 13.
Thick/Thin as Multifaceted Metaphor
Preface: Thickening International Theory or Shrinking the Shagreen Skin?
Acknowledgments 1. On the Road Toward a Globalized International Theory
Part 1. Racist/Eurocentric Foundations of IR, c.1850-2020: Why IR's
Conception of the International is Provincial and Thin 2. Beyond a 'More
International' International Relations 3. Un-veiling the Racist Foundations
of Modern Realist and Liberal IR Theory Part 2. Problematizing
International Theory: How and Why 'Bringing the Non-Western World In'
Overcomes the Thin Eurocentric Conception of the International 4.
Challenging the Illusion of Theoretical 'Internationalness' 5. Being
International and/or Global? 6. On the Logic of Non-Western Theoretical
Argument 7. Identity, Knowledge, Dialogue and the International Part 3.
Globalizing International Theory: Constructing a Non-Eurocentric Thick
Conception of the International 8. Ethno-Culturalism in World History:
Race, Identity and 'the Global' 9. Pluriversality in Islamic Political
Thought 10. International or Not, Being Human is Being 'Global'! 11.
Indigenous Disruptions: How Indigenous Self-Determination Practices Can
Deepen and Expand International Theory 12. International Theory and
Critique in Unusual Places: From Lusotropicalism to Anticolonial Poetics
Part 4. Conclusion: Reflections on Globalizing International Theory 13.
Thick/Thin as Multifaceted Metaphor
Acknowledgments 1. On the Road Toward a Globalized International Theory
Part 1. Racist/Eurocentric Foundations of IR, c.1850-2020: Why IR's
Conception of the International is Provincial and Thin 2. Beyond a 'More
International' International Relations 3. Un-veiling the Racist Foundations
of Modern Realist and Liberal IR Theory Part 2. Problematizing
International Theory: How and Why 'Bringing the Non-Western World In'
Overcomes the Thin Eurocentric Conception of the International 4.
Challenging the Illusion of Theoretical 'Internationalness' 5. Being
International and/or Global? 6. On the Logic of Non-Western Theoretical
Argument 7. Identity, Knowledge, Dialogue and the International Part 3.
Globalizing International Theory: Constructing a Non-Eurocentric Thick
Conception of the International 8. Ethno-Culturalism in World History:
Race, Identity and 'the Global' 9. Pluriversality in Islamic Political
Thought 10. International or Not, Being Human is Being 'Global'! 11.
Indigenous Disruptions: How Indigenous Self-Determination Practices Can
Deepen and Expand International Theory 12. International Theory and
Critique in Unusual Places: From Lusotropicalism to Anticolonial Poetics
Part 4. Conclusion: Reflections on Globalizing International Theory 13.
Thick/Thin as Multifaceted Metaphor