This article analyzes the core–periphery dynamics that characterize the International Relations discipline. To this end, it explores general insights offered by both science studies and the social sciences in terms of the intellectual division of labor that characterizes knowledge-building throughout the world, and the social mechanisms that reproduce power differentials within given fields of study. These arguments are then applied to International Relations, where specific factors that explain the global South’s role as a periphery to the discipline’s (mainly US) core and the ways in which peripheral communities place themselves vis-à-vis International Relations’ (neo)imperialist structure are both explored
What does it take to be an international relations (IR) scholar? IR discourses have tackled this que...
In this article, I argue that while the Global South has replaced the Third World as the prevalent t...
El desarrollo de las relaciones internacionales (rrii) es relativamente reciente en comparación con...
This article analyzes the core–periphery dynamics that characterize the International Relations disc...
Mainstream international relations (IR) has been built as an extension of imperial concerns. Thus, a...
It has become widely accepted that the discipline of International Relations (IR) is ironically not ...
This article discusses the concept of \u27international relations from below\u27. \u27International ...
A host of voices has risen to challenge Western core dominance of the field of International Relatio...
The accelerated internationalization of today's society forces Social Sciences to find new methods a...
von Dorothea Gädeke This article is part of the TRAFO series “Doing Global International Relations”....
This article assesses international partnerships by observing research collaboration dynamics of Int...
This exciting new textbook challenges the implicit notions inherent in most existing International R...
More than two decades ago, Stanley Hoffmann described the discipline of international relations (IR)...
What have we learned after taking this global tour of International Relations scholarship? Each of t...
El desarrollo de las relaciones internacionales (rrii) es relativamente reciente en comparación con ...
What does it take to be an international relations (IR) scholar? IR discourses have tackled this que...
In this article, I argue that while the Global South has replaced the Third World as the prevalent t...
El desarrollo de las relaciones internacionales (rrii) es relativamente reciente en comparación con...
This article analyzes the core–periphery dynamics that characterize the International Relations disc...
Mainstream international relations (IR) has been built as an extension of imperial concerns. Thus, a...
It has become widely accepted that the discipline of International Relations (IR) is ironically not ...
This article discusses the concept of \u27international relations from below\u27. \u27International ...
A host of voices has risen to challenge Western core dominance of the field of International Relatio...
The accelerated internationalization of today's society forces Social Sciences to find new methods a...
von Dorothea Gädeke This article is part of the TRAFO series “Doing Global International Relations”....
This article assesses international partnerships by observing research collaboration dynamics of Int...
This exciting new textbook challenges the implicit notions inherent in most existing International R...
More than two decades ago, Stanley Hoffmann described the discipline of international relations (IR)...
What have we learned after taking this global tour of International Relations scholarship? Each of t...
El desarrollo de las relaciones internacionales (rrii) es relativamente reciente en comparación con ...
What does it take to be an international relations (IR) scholar? IR discourses have tackled this que...
In this article, I argue that while the Global South has replaced the Third World as the prevalent t...
El desarrollo de las relaciones internacionales (rrii) es relativamente reciente en comparación con...