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World Affairs Online
The arms trade in international relations
In: Praeger special studies in international politics and public affairs
INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS. SCIENCE WITHOUT METHOD?
In: Meždunarodnye processy: žurnal teorii meždunarodnych otnošenij i mirovoj politiki = International trends : journal of theory of international relations and world politics, Band 17, Heft 2(57)
World Affairs Online
International relations theory: competing empirical paradigms
This book argues against the traditional understanding of international relations through the study of ideology and introduces four new major paradigms in the study of international relations theory: Marxian, mass society, community building, and rational choice
Adler, Emanuel, Communitarian International Relations. The Epistemic Foundations of International Relations, coll. The New International Relations, New York, Routledge, 2005, 334 p
In: Études internationales, Band 38, Heft 4, S. 584
ISSN: 1703-7891
The Black Fantastic in International Relations
In: Review of international studies: RIS, Band 49, Heft 4, S. 584-596
ISSN: 1469-9044
AbstractIn 2016, British investigative journalist Simon Rogers created a map/timeline of Twitter hashtags associated with Black Lives Matter. The map (which no longer exists) indirectly shows both the intensity of Black Lives Matter protests and their geographic scope. Within the United States, we see not only protest activity in metropolitan areas with large black population percentages, but also protest activity in metropolitan areas with few (if any) African Americans. Further, we see protests not just in the United States but throughout the world. The 2020 George Floyd murder arguably spurred more protests against police violence within the United States and around the world than any other moment. We understand these protests as part of a broader decolonial project that seeks to eradicate racialised violence. How does this project develop? In examining Black Lives Matter as a movement, most have either focused on domestic activity within the United States or on instances of international activity, but few have attempted to theorise its spread. I suggest that any approach that focuses solely or primarily on technological advances or on the work of activists misses an essential and under-examined element – US Black popular culture.
Classical theories of international relations
In: St. Antony's series
Fifty key thinkers in international relations
In: Routledge key guides
The State in International Relations Reconsidered
In: International studies, Band 35, Heft 3, S. 269-293
ISSN: 0973-0702, 1939-9987