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ID170369
Title ProperCritique and Alternativity in International Relations
LanguageENG
AuthorVisoka, Gëzim
Summary / Abstract (Note)This article critically interrogates the episteme of alternativity in international relations (IR) to rethink the purpose of critical knowledge in global politics. It questions what critical knowledge is for and whose purpose it serves. While alternativity is the very condition that has given rise to critical approaches, there is a deep-rooted division among critical scholars regarding the relationship between criticality and alternativity. This article argues that alternativity provides an opportunity for critical scholars to remain relevant without being affiliated with positivist logics of inquiry. In examining the potential of alternativity, the article explores three modes of alternativity in peace and conflict studies: critique-without-alternative, critique-as-alternative, and critique-with-alternative. It probes the merits and limits of the episteme of alternativity in generating new possibilities for advancing emancipatory interests and saving critical theory from losing its original transformative impetus. In the final part, the article explores future directions for rejuvenating the purpose of critique by exploring the nexus between criticality and alternativity on postparadigmatic and practical grounds.
`In' analytical NoteInternational Studies Review Vol. 21, No.4; Dec 2019: p.678–704
Journal SourceInternational Studies Review Vol: 21 No 4
Key WordsEmancipation ;  Critique ;  Peace and Conflict Studies ;  Alternativity


 
 
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