An Ontological Rethinking of Identity in International Studies

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This book shows that identity studies in the discipline of International Relations (IR) generally cohere around two discrete understandings of being, substantialism and correlationism, and that their analytical, theoretical, and epistemological orientations are split along those lines. This binary opposition makes it difficult for identity scholarship to meet the internal validity standard of coherence while unnecessarily narrowing the theoretical lenses of constructivism in IR. The author argues that the best way to step outside that binary is to re-ground identity in ontology of immanence. The book shows that immanent ontological thinking enables us to have a pluralist epistemology and methodology for the study of identity, including both positivist and interpretivist orientations, without yielding a logically inconsistent alignment.

 


Author(s): Yong-Soo Eun
Series: Palgrave Studies in International Relations
Publisher: Palgrave Macmillan
Year: 2023

Language: English
Pages: 95
City: Cham

Acknowledgements
Contents
List of Tables
1 Introduction: A Thorny Problem
A Brief Survey: How Does (the Splitting of) Identity Scholarship Take Shape in IR?
Bibliography
2 A Typology of Identity Research in IR
Substantialist Type: Identity-As-Entity
Correlationist Type: Identity-As-Flux
Bibliography
3 Re-Grounding Identity in Ontology of Immanence
An Ontology of Immanence
Morphogenetic Type: Identity-As-Machine
Bibliography
4 Illustrations and Implications
Implications for the Problem of West-Centrism in IR
Implications for Theoretical Contributions and Progress
Bibliography
Index