ID | 094556 |
Title Proper | Sociology and international relations: legacies and prospects |
Language | ENG |
Author | Lawson , George ; Shilliam, Robbie |
Publication | 2010. |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | While sociological concepts have often been implicitly used in International Relations (IR), recent years have seen a more explicit engagement between IR and Sociology. As with any such interdisciplinary assignation, there are both possibilities and challenges contained within this move: possibilities in terms of reducing IR's intellectual autism and opening the discipline towards potentially fertile terrain that was never, actually, that distant; challenges in that interdisciplinary raiding parties can often serve as pseudonyms for cannibalism, shallowness and dilettantism. This forum reviews the sociological turn in IR and interrogates it from a novel vantage point-how sociologists themselves approach IR concepts, debates and issues. Three sociological approaches-classical social theory, historical sociology and Foucauldian analysis-are critically deployed to illuminate IR concerns. In this way, the forum offers the possibility of (re)establishing exchanges between the two disciplines premised on a firmer grasp of social theory itself. The result is a potentially more fruitful sociological turn, one with significant benefits for IR as a whole. |
`In' analytical Note | Cambridge Review of International Affairs Vol. 23, 1; Mar 2010: p69-86 |
Journal Source | Cambridge Review of International Affairs Vol. 23, 1; Mar 2010: p69-86 |
Key Words | Sociology ; Internatioanl Relations ; IR ; Legacies |