The Discipline of International Relations: Still an American Social Science?
Top Cited Papers
- 1 October 2000
- journal article
- Published by SAGE Publications in The British Journal of Politics and International Relations
- Vol. 2 (3) , 374-402
- https://doi.org/10.1111/1467-856x.00042
Abstract
This article reviews the state of the discipline of international relations. It starts from statements made by the editors in their editorial published in the first issue of this journal. The editors noted that there seemed to have been less adherence to positivism in international relations than in other areas of political science and that there was both more opposition to positivism and more methodological and epistemological openness in international relations than in political science generally. The article outlines the current state of the field, focusing on the rationalist mainstream and then on the reflectivist alternatives, before looking at social constructivism, seeing it as the likely acceptable alternative to rationalism in the mainstream literature of the next decade. It then turns to examine whether international relations is still an American social science, before looking at the situation in the United Kingdom. It concludes that the editors' comments were indeed accurate, but that the fact that there is both more opposition to positivism in international relations and more openness in the UK academic community does not mean that the mainstream US literature is anything like as open or pluralist. The UK community is indeed more able to develop theory relevant to the globalised world at the new millennium, but the US academic community still dominates the discipline.Keywords
This publication has 26 references indexed in Scilit:
- Editorial: Studying British PoliticsThe British Journal of Politics and International Relations, 1999
- On constitution and causation in International RelationsReview of International Studies, 1998
- International Relations: One World, Many TheoriesForeign Policy, 1998
- The Constructive Turn in International Relations TheoryWorld Politics, 1997
- Seizing the Middle Ground:European Journal of International Relations, 1997
- Anarchy is what states make of it: the social construction of power politicsInternational Organization, 1992
- Paradigm Dominance in International Relations: The Development of International Relations as a Social ScienceMillennium: Journal of International Studies, 1987
- The agent-structure problem in international relations theoryInternational Organization, 1987
- International organization: a state of the art on an art of the stateInternational Organization, 1986
- The Structure of the Theoretical Revolution in International RelationsInternational Studies Quarterly, 1974