Globalizing International Theory The Problem with Western IR Theory and How to Overcome It

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Globalizing International Theory adds to the literature on non-Western international relations (IR) theory by probing the question of what it means to globalize international theory. The book starts with the premise that international theory is unfinished, incomplete, and homogenous because it provides a limited conception of the international which, in turn, derives from its partiality that reflects its narrow Western-centric bias. The contributors argue that the IR vision of the world is projected through a polarizing Western-filtered lens. Rather than utilizing an objective set of explanatory tools for explaining world politics, the reality is that orthodox IR theory only tells us why ‘the West is best’ and why ‘the Rest should become like the West’. This means that international theory is not truly international. In provincializing Western international theory, this volume navigates beyond the Eurocentric and imperial frontier of the prevailing limited conception of the international to explore the hidden contributions to international theory which can be found in the non-Western world. Bringing in excluded, non-Western conceptions of international theory highlights a broader conception of the international. The book provides a framework for theorizing globally, exploring the fundamental problems with Western IR theory, and how to overcome them. This book will be used by advanced undergraduate and postgraduate students, scholars, researchers, and IR theorists worldwide who are interested in non-Western IR theory. It will help navigate the problem of internationalness in the face of the grand theoretical problem of our time: the use and misuse of international theory in making sense of, and responding to, the complex global realities of the twenty-first century.

Author(s): A. Layug, John M. Hobson
Series: Worlding Beyond the West
Publisher: Routledge
Year: 2022

Language: English
Pages: 277
City: London

Cover
Half Title
Series
Title
Copyright
Contents
Notes on Contributors
Preface: Thickening International Theory or Shrinking the Shagreen Skin?
Acknowledgements
1 On the Road Toward a Globalized International Theory
Part I Racist/Eurocentric Foundations of IR, c.1919–2020: 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 II 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 III 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 Anti-colonial Poetics
Part IV Conclusion: Reflections on Globalizing International Theory
13 Thick/Thin as Multifaceted Metaphor
Index