Nicholas Onuf on the Evolution of Social Constructivsm, Turns in IR, and a Discipline of Our Making

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    Abstract

    Can we really go on speaking about International Relations as a ‘discipline’? Even if social constructivism is often presented as a robust theoretical cornerstone of the discipline, one of the thinkers that established this theoretical position challenges the existence of IR. Surely, Nicholas Onuf argues, we have a disciplinary machinery—institutions, journals, conferences and so forth—but these form an apparatus built around a substantive void—in his words, ‘a discipline without an ‘about’’. In this Talk, Nicholas Onuf—among others—weaves an appraisal of disciplinary boundaries through a discussion of social constructivism’s birth and growth, tells the material turn to get serious and provides a bleak assessment of IR’s subservient relation to political order.
    Original languageEnglish
    JournalTheory Talks
    Volume2015
    Issue number70
    ISSN2001-4732
    Publication statusPublished - 2 Jul 2015

    Keywords

    • international relations theory
    • social constructivism

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