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POST POSITIVISM (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   117842


In Heidegger's shadow: a phenomenological critique of critical realism / Michel, Torsten   Journal Article
Michel, Torsten Journal Article
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Publication 2012.
Summary/Abstract The field of International Relations (IR) although in many quarters still immersed in the epistemological trenches surrounding the fourth debate between positivism and post-positivism saw the emergence of a renewed interest and debate about the state and rigour of 'our' ontological assumptions. One currently very prominent contribution to this emerging or re-emerging interest in ontological questions can be found in the Critical Realist (CR) approach.
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2
ID:   162504


Transatlantic burden sharing: suggesting a new research agenda / Zyla, Benjamin   Journal Article
Zyla, Benjamin Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract Current studies on NATO burden sharing are only able to show some weak statistical trends between selective variables; they are unable to explain and show why this trend exists and why it occurred at particular times (or not). This is due to the dominant deductive and hypothesis testing research designs that prevent researchers to produce richer causal explanations or intersubjective understandings of how states, for example, construct and assign meaning to burdens or what forms of social representation, values, norms and ideals influence the making of (national) burden sharing decisions. Thus, we charge, the literature needs to adopt an eclecticist approach to studying NATO burden sharing – that is to combine rationalist with sociological approaches and methodologies highlighting the importance of intersubjective meanings and the role of social forces, norms, beliefs, and values. The article lays out what such a research programme might look like and how one could operationalise it.
Key Words NATO  Collective Action  Burden Sharing  Eclecticism  Post Positivism 
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