What does international order look like when analysed from its margins? Such a question is the obvious consequence of efforts within International Relations (IR) to take empire, colonialism and hierarchy more seriously. This article addresses this question by examining one of IR’s most important touchstones – the Great War – through the experiences of peoples in southeast Africa. It argues that to do this, we should use the methodological approaches of histories ‘from below’ and contrapuntal analysis. When looking at the Great War from the vantage point of southeast Africa (contemporary Mozambique), the key patterns of interaction organising the international look different to those emphasised in traditional accounts of international order ...
While the discourse of great power politics is an intellectual commonplace of International Relation...
International relations (IR) scholars commonly accept the sovereign state’s ubiquity today as the en...
This article investigates the contribution of decolonising states to the nascent international order...
What does international order look like when analysed from its margins? Such a question is the obvio...
This thesis attempts to diversify International Relations’ understanding of the patterns of ordering...
The Eurocentric critique of the International Relations discipline has brought welcome attention to ...
Contemporary world order rests on a fault-line. On the one hand it is an interstate system founded o...
This article examines what it calls Africa’s International Relations (IR) historiography, an assessm...
Taking the phenomenon of empire as its starting point, this article seeks to provide a framework for...
Contemporary world order rests on a fault-line. On the one hand it is an interstate system founded o...
Unlike many other social sciences, International Relations (IR) spends relatively little time assess...
This article in three parts offers the beginnings of a postcolonial critique of mainstream Internati...
This article comprises a study of the devastating impact of the First World War upon colonial author...
This is a study of British policy-makers and their perceptions of the Empire immediately after the F...
This article offers an alternative account of the origins of academic IR to the conventional Aberyst...
While the discourse of great power politics is an intellectual commonplace of International Relation...
International relations (IR) scholars commonly accept the sovereign state’s ubiquity today as the en...
This article investigates the contribution of decolonising states to the nascent international order...
What does international order look like when analysed from its margins? Such a question is the obvio...
This thesis attempts to diversify International Relations’ understanding of the patterns of ordering...
The Eurocentric critique of the International Relations discipline has brought welcome attention to ...
Contemporary world order rests on a fault-line. On the one hand it is an interstate system founded o...
This article examines what it calls Africa’s International Relations (IR) historiography, an assessm...
Taking the phenomenon of empire as its starting point, this article seeks to provide a framework for...
Contemporary world order rests on a fault-line. On the one hand it is an interstate system founded o...
Unlike many other social sciences, International Relations (IR) spends relatively little time assess...
This article in three parts offers the beginnings of a postcolonial critique of mainstream Internati...
This article comprises a study of the devastating impact of the First World War upon colonial author...
This is a study of British policy-makers and their perceptions of the Empire immediately after the F...
This article offers an alternative account of the origins of academic IR to the conventional Aberyst...
While the discourse of great power politics is an intellectual commonplace of International Relation...
International relations (IR) scholars commonly accept the sovereign state’s ubiquity today as the en...
This article investigates the contribution of decolonising states to the nascent international order...