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Politics

Resumen/Descripción – provisto por la editorial en inglés
Since its launch in 1980, POLITICS has published cutting-edge analysis in politics and international studies. The ethos of POLITICS is the dissemination of timely, research-led reflections on the state of the art, the state of the world and the state of disciplinary pedagogy that make significant and original contributions to the disciplines of political and international studies. POLITICS is pluralist with regards to approaches, theories, methods, and empirical foci.
Palabras clave – provistas por la editorial

politics; international studies; political; power; critical; analysis; studies; parliament; governme

Disponibilidad
Institución detectada Período Navegá Descargá Solicitá
No detectada desde feb. 1999 / hasta dic. 2023 SAGE Journals
No detectada desde ene. 1997 / hasta dic. 2010 Wiley Online Library

Información

Tipo de recurso:

revistas

ISSN impreso

0263-3957

ISSN electrónico

1467-9256

Editor responsable

SAGE Publishing (SAGE)

País de edición

Estados Unidos

Fecha de publicación

Cobertura temática

Tabla de contenidos

The imperative of African perspectives on International Relations (IR)

Amy Niang

<jats:p> This article argues that location, as both geography and epistemology, can be a place of innovation in the discipline of international relations (IR). Specifically, it suggests that a re-appropriation of IR as a product of a global history in which the Global South, in general, and Africa, in particular, played an important role can help displace the moral and historical centrality of Western theory where it has failed to give credence to ‘peripheral’ experience and social thought. This belief coincides with a commonsense according to which the production of knowledge is by necessity inseparable from the intellectual conventions, traditions and lineages of the place of production. This means that African universities in particular have the opportunity to generate new perspectives in IR based on the analyses of the historical events that marked the life of the continent. In this manner, thinking and teaching IR in Africa would consist of revisiting the received truths about the evolution of the international order and society by revising their historical underpinnings, where necessary, and by interrogating the ‘unit-ideas’ that structure disciplinary impulses. </jats:p>

Palabras clave: Political Science and International Relations.

Pp. 453-466

Paradoxes of identity change: Integrating macro, meso, and micro research on identity in conflict processes

Bahar Rumelili; Jennifer Todd

<jats:p> Identity change is a core element of political conflict and transformation. Most relevant are changes towards and away from dyadically opposed identities. Defining an ‘enemy’, narrowing, or broadening the inner and outer circles of belonging to include or exclude the Other, are integral to conflict processes at international, state, group, and individual levels. This Special Issue brings together scholars with varied sub-disciplinary interests to engage with a set of common paradoxes surrounding identity change, in order to generate more synthetic comparative understandings of these processes. It aims to synthesize insights from different approaches and to show how change from dyadically opposed identities takes place in different contexts. </jats:p>

Palabras clave: Political Science and International Relations.

Pp. 3-18