What's the point of international relations? /

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Bibliographic Details
Group Author: Dyvik, Synne L. (Editor); Selby, Jan, 1972- (Editor); Wilkinson, Rorden, 1970- (Editor)
Published: Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group,
Publisher Address: London :
Publication Dates: 2017.
Literature type: Book
Language: English
Subjects:
Carrier Form: xiii, 274 pages ; 25 cm
Bibliography: Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN: 9781138707306 (hardback) :
1138707309 (hardback)
9781138707313 (paperback)
1138707317 (paperback)
9781315201467 (ebook)
1315201461 (ebook)
Index Number: JZ1242
CLC: D81
Call Number: D81/W555
Contents: Asking questions of, and about, IR /
What's the point of IR? : the international in the invention of humanity /
Insecurity redux : the perennial problem of "the point of IR" /
What's the point of IR? : or, we're so paranoid, we probably think this question is about us /
In defense of IR /
Relocating the point of IR in understanding industrial-age global problems /
Past as prefigurative prelude : feminist peace activists and IR /
Beyond practitioner histories of international relations : or, the stories that professors like to tell (about) themselves /
How elite networks shape the contours of the discipline and what we might do about it /
Be careful what you wish for : positivism and the desire for relevance in the American study of IR /
Don't flatter yourself : world politics as we know it is changing and so must disciplinary IR /
Indian IR : older and newer orientations /
Undisciplined IR : thinking without a net /
Mind the gap : defining and measuring policy engagement in IR /
IR theory in the Anthropocene : time for a reality check? /
UN studies and IR : history, ideas, and problem-solving /
Beyond the "Ivory Tower"? : IR in the world /
Escaping from the prison of political science : what IR offers that other disciplines do not /
The future of feminist international relations /
A methodological turn long overdue : or, why it is time for critical scholars to cut their losses /
Subverting the "international" : imagining future as past /