Item Details
Skip Navigation Links
   ActiveUsers:375Hits:19948419Skip Navigation Links
Show My Basket
Contact Us
IDSA Web Site
Ask Us
Today's News
HelpExpand Help
Advanced search

In Basket
  Journal Article   Journal Article
 

ID114982
Title ProperWhat can the absence of anarchism tell us about the history and purpose of international relations?
LanguageENG
AuthorPrichard, Alex
Publication2011.
Summary / Abstract (Note)Anarchism does not feature in contemporary international relations (IR) as a discreet approach to world politics because until very recently it was antithetical to the traditional use-value of a discipline largely structured around the needs and intellectual demands of providing for the world's Foreign Offices and State Departments. This article tells part of the story of how this came to be so by revisiting the historiography of the discipline and an early debate between Harold Laski and Hans Morgenthau. What I will show here is that Morgenthau's Schmittian-informed theory of the nation state was diametrically opposed to Laski's Proudhon-informed pluralist state theory. Morgenthau's success and the triumph of Realism structured the subsequent evolution of the discipline. What was to characterise the early stages of this evolution was IR's professional and intellectual statism. The subsequent historiography of the discipline has also played a part in retrospectively keeping anarchism out. This article demonstrates how a return to this early debate and the historiography of the discipline opens up a little more room for anarchism in contemporary IR and suggests further avenues for research.
`In' analytical NoteReview of International Studies Vol. 37, No.4; Oct 2011: p.1647-1669
Journal SourceReview of International Studies Vol. 37, No.4; Oct 2011: p.1647-1669
Key WordsAnarchism ;  Contemporary International Relations ;  International Relations ;  World Politics ;  Intellectual Statism


 
 
Media / Other Links  Full Text