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Critical Approaches to International Relations

2023-2024

FrESPOL European School of Political and Social Sciences ( ESPOL )

Code Cours :

2324-ESPOL-IR-EN-4002


Niveau Année de formation Période Langue d'enseignement 
S1FrAnglais
Professeur(s) responsable(s)SARAH PERRET
Intervenant(s)Pas d'autre intervenant

    Ce cours apparaît dans les formations suivantes :
  • ESPOL - Master 1 Global and European Politics - S1 - 4 ECTS
    ESPOL - Master 1 Food Politics and Sustainable Development - S1 - 4 ECTS
    ESPOL - Master 1 Digital Politics and Governance - S1 - 4 ECTS
    ESPOL - Master 1 International and Security Politics - S1 - 4 ECTS

Objectifs du cours

Students will deepen their understanding of international relations approaches by examining the core debates of the field and learn how to apply these critical approaches to contemporary global politics.

Contenu du cours

This course explores the constellation of critical approaches to International Relations studies that have emerged from and after the debates with rationalist approaches (Liberalism, Realism approaches). Neo-marxist, post-colonialist, feminist, or sociological approaches, they all share the critique of a positivist aim to produce a stato-centric and value free scholarship, and a concern to develop perspectives that reveal the relations of domination at work in international politics. The first part of the course examines a broad range of critical approaches to IR, and the second part will focus on specific topics that are at the heart of critical approaches’ interest such as identity, security, and institutions.

Session 1: The reflective Turn in International Relations
• Booth Ken (2019), ‘International Relations: The Story So Far’, International Relations, Vol. 33(2): 358-390.

Session 2: Neo-Marxist Approaches
• Cox Robert W. (1981), ‘Social forces, States and World Orders: Beyond International Relations Theory’, Millennium, 10 (2): pp. 126-155.
• Wallerstein Immanuel (1990), ‘Culture as the Ideological Battleground of the Modern World-System’, Theory, Culture & Society, Volume 7, Issue 2-3: 31-55.

Session 3: Post-colonial approaches
• Chowdhry Geeta and Nai Sheila (2004), ‘Introduction’: Power in a postcolonial world: Race, gender, and class in international relations, in Power, Postcolonialism and international relations. Reading race, gender and class, London: routledge: 1-28
• Bilgin Pinar (2016), ‘“Contrapuntal Reading” as a Method, an Ethos, and a Metaphor for Global IR’, International Studies Review, 18 : pp. 134–146.

Session 4: Feminist approaches
• Tickner Ann J.(2005). “What Is Your Research Program? Some Feminist Answers to International Relations Methodological Questions”, International Studies Quarterly, 49(1): 1- 21.
• Henry Marsha (2017), ‘Problematizing military masculinity, intersectionality and male vulnerability in feminist critical military studies’, Critical Military Studies, Vol. 3(2): pp. 182-199.

Session 5: Sociological and constructivist approaches
• Finnemore Martha (1996), ‘Norms, culture, and world politics: insights from sociology’s institutionalism’, International Organization, Vol. 50 (2), pp. 325-347.
• Waever Ole (2011), ‘Politics, Security, Theory’, Security Dialogue, Vol. 42 (4-5): 465-480.

Session 6: Institutions, sovereignty and IR
• Keohane, Robert (1988). “International Institutions: Two Approaches”, International Studies Quarterly 32(4): 379-396. (In John J. Kirton (Ed.), International Organization, 2009, London: Routledge).
• Bigo Didier & Walker Rob (2007), ‘Political Sociology and the Problem of the International’, Millennium: Journal of International Studies, Vol. 35 No.3: pp. 725-739.
Session 7: Security
• Chisholm Amanda (2014), ‘Marketing the Gurkha security package: Colonial histories and neoliberal economies of private security’, Security Dialogue, Vol. 45(4): 349–372.
• Aradau Claudia & van Munster Rens (2007), ‘Governing Terrorism Through Risk: Taking Precautions, (un)Knowing the Future’, European Journal of International Relations, Vol. 13 (1): 89-115.

Session 8: Identity and Citizenship
• Leese Matthias (2022), ‘Fixing State Vision: Interoperability, Biometrics, and Identity Management in the EU’, Geopolitics, Vol. 27 (1): 113-133.
• Williams Michael C. (1998), ‘Identity and the Politics of Security’, European Journal of International Relations, Vol. 4 (2): 204-225.

Session 9: Conclusion: Critics of Critical approaches
• Hobson John M. (2007), ‘Is critical theory always for the white West and for Western imperialism? Beyond Westphalian towards a post-racist critical IR’, Review of International Studies, 33, 91–116.
• Austin Jonathan L., Bellanova Rocco, & Kaufmann Mareile (2


Modalités d'enseignement

Organisation du cours

From oral presentations and discussions, students will have the opportunity to improve their research, writing, and presentation skills.


Text analysis and interactive discussions

Méthodes pédagogiques


    Évaluation

    Contrôle continu : coeff. 100


    Bibliographie

    • Suggested Reading list, , Acharya, A. – Buzan, B. (2019), The Making of Global International Relations: Origins and Evolutions of IR at Its Centenary, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press , Balzacq Thierry (2016), Théories de la sécurité, Les approches critiques, Paris: Presses de Sciences Po., Basaran Tugba, Bigo Didier, Guittet Emmanuel-Pierre & Walker R.B.J (Eds) (2017), International Political Sociology. Transversal Lines, London: Routledge., Edkins Jenny & Vaughan-Williams Nick (Eds.), Critical Theorists and international relations, London and New York, Routledge, 2009., Enloe Cynthia (2014), Bananas, Beaches and Bases: Making Feminist Sense of International Politics, London: University of California Press., Krause Keith & Williams Michael C. (Eds) (1997), Critical Security Studies. Concepts And Strategies, London: Routledge., Smith Steve, Booth Ken, & Zalewski Marysa (1996), International Theory: Positivism and Beyond, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press., Students with limited previous training in International Relations may purchase the following book for background reading:, Dario Battistella (2015), Théories des relations internationales, 5ème edition, Paris: Presses de Sciences Po, 2015., Dunne Tim, Kurki Milja and Smith Steve (eds.) (2016), International Relations Theories, 4th edition, Oxford University Press, 2016., OTHER Reading resources , The main scholarly journals in the field of international relations theory, particularly the Review of International Studies, Millennium, International Studies Quarterly, International Organization, Third World Quarterly, the European Journal of International Relations, Geopolitics, Cultures & Conflits. , , , ,




     
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