This essay develops a critique of modern constructivist approaches to norms in international relations theory. It distinguishes between a behaviourist and a societal perspec-tive on norms. The former explains compliance with norms and/or norm diffusion via the logic of appropriateness and the logic of arguing, respectively, the latter understands divergence in normative meaning via the logic of contestedness. Using Habermas’s approach to facts and norms as a framework, the article discusses the possibilities of legitimate governance based on core constitutional norms such as democracy, the rule of law and fundamental and human rights and their role in contexts beyond the modern nation-state.
This paper constitutes a component of a larger research project. The larger project attempts to addr...
International norms exist as constraints on foreign policy, yet norms are also the product of the fo...
For decades, sociologists have employed the concept of social norms to explain how society shapes in...
Acknowledging the social constructivist turn in the study of norms, this article offers to demonstra...
This article contributes to the burgeoning norms literature in international relations that conceptu...
Constitutionalism is ‘a legal limitation on government ’ and ‘an antithesis of arbitrary rule. ’ It ...
Contains fulltext : 159968.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Theories on t...
First generation norm scholars treat the meaning of a norm as if it was clear-cut and static in ord...
Global governance in the current international system seems to be characterized by a paradox: a gove...
Norms are one of the most widely studied topics of contemporary International Relations scholarship....
There are growing connections between the IR constructivist focus on norms and norm contestation and...
Social norms, defined as shared expectations about appropriate behavior, are ubiquitous in world pol...
There are a wide variety of contemporary international norms: some are large and diffuse, while othe...
This article offers a new conceptualisation of the meaning of norms in world politics. It starts fro...
This Study seeks to examine the contestation of an emerging norm by one or more state actors dedicat...
This paper constitutes a component of a larger research project. The larger project attempts to addr...
International norms exist as constraints on foreign policy, yet norms are also the product of the fo...
For decades, sociologists have employed the concept of social norms to explain how society shapes in...
Acknowledging the social constructivist turn in the study of norms, this article offers to demonstra...
This article contributes to the burgeoning norms literature in international relations that conceptu...
Constitutionalism is ‘a legal limitation on government ’ and ‘an antithesis of arbitrary rule. ’ It ...
Contains fulltext : 159968.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Theories on t...
First generation norm scholars treat the meaning of a norm as if it was clear-cut and static in ord...
Global governance in the current international system seems to be characterized by a paradox: a gove...
Norms are one of the most widely studied topics of contemporary International Relations scholarship....
There are growing connections between the IR constructivist focus on norms and norm contestation and...
Social norms, defined as shared expectations about appropriate behavior, are ubiquitous in world pol...
There are a wide variety of contemporary international norms: some are large and diffuse, while othe...
This article offers a new conceptualisation of the meaning of norms in world politics. It starts fro...
This Study seeks to examine the contestation of an emerging norm by one or more state actors dedicat...
This paper constitutes a component of a larger research project. The larger project attempts to addr...
International norms exist as constraints on foreign policy, yet norms are also the product of the fo...
For decades, sociologists have employed the concept of social norms to explain how society shapes in...