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ID165591
Title ProperBringing the outsiders in
Other Title Informationan interactionist perspective on deviance and normative change in international politics
LanguageENG
AuthorOnderco, Michal ;  SMETANA, MICHAL
Summary / Abstract (Note)In this article, we draw on insights from the interactionist perspective in sociology and international relations (IR) norm contestation literature to explore the relationship between deviance and normative change in international politics. In IR, this is still largely unexplored territory: we already know a great deal about how norms change, yet we know much less about the actual role norm violations play in this process. In order to address this gap, we conceptualize three types of normative contestation and affirmation that take place in connection with deviance (re)construction: (1) applicatory contestation and affirmation, reconstructing the meanings of international norms; (2) justificatory contestation and affirmation, challenging and reaffirming the legitimacy of international norms; and (3) hierarchical contestation and affirmation, contesting and reaffirming the relative value and importance of international norms. We discuss how, as a consequence of these dynamics, deviance-making produces both stability and change in the normative structure of world politics.
`In' analytical NoteCambridge Review of International Affairs Vol. 31, No.6; Dec 2018: p.516-536
Journal SourceCambridge Review of International Affairs Vol: 31 No 6
Key WordsWorld Politics ;  International Politics ;  International Relations


 
 
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