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Does everyone need a national IR school? Engaging the sociology of IRs most recent appropriation
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a third justification for nationalising IR heard in New Orleans suggested that the discipline favoured the status
quo of world politics, and that this was not in the interest of many.
Of course, discussions at the ISA Annual Convention do not tend to go terribly deep, and so the arguments
listed here might be simplifying and incomplete. Yet at this level of articulation, it did not seem to me then and
it still does not seem to me today that the nationalisation of IR proposes a productive way forward, or that it
reflects well the ambitions and goals of the broader sociology of IR research agenda, no matter how often the
latters insights are mobilised for support. Indeed, in my reading, works on the sociology of IR are much more
ambitious at the empirical/analytical and for those recognising and subscribing to such a component the
political level alike.
At the empirical/analytical level, the research agendas goal is and remains to develop a grounded and
comprehensive understanding of the basic processes by which IR as a professional field is working. As
mentioned, this goal appears far from achieved, not the least since the sociology of IR research agenda has
only been launched recently. Indeed, it is not for more than a couple of years now that the discipline proper has
become an object of systematic reflection and empirical work, and so it seems premature to draw final
conclusions already today. In my understanding, many of the central mechanisms of disciplinary operation still
remain to be mapped and understood.
In my reading, the sociology of IR also subscribes to a considerably more dialectical type of pluralism than what
the nationalisation of IR is oering. For many scholars enquiring into IR, pluralism is not about instituting a
multipolar discipline in which a multiplicity of self-contained thinking systems competes with each other for
global supremacy. Instead, the aim is to empower reflected engagement with paralleling frameworks of world
politics, their explicit assumptions and tacit penchants. The kind of pluralism pursued by the sociology of IR
agenda seen this way appeals strongly to analytical schooling, not standpoints. The proliferation of selfreferential scientific discourses, and thus the reproduction of exclusion, is not among its aims.
This said, I do not wish to simply reject out of hand the arguments made by the proponents of IR
nationalisation. Rather than to endorse their underlying premises, some of which flirt rather heavily with
essentialist and nationalist propositions, however, I would like to re-engage them from a more analytical
perspective. By developing further the arguments heard at ISA and elsewhere, so I would hope, some central
concerns of the speakers can be engaged yet their analyses can also be aligned more productively with the
ambitions and goals of the sociology of IR research agenda, i.e. the body of literature on which presenters draw
to call for national IR schools.
Instead of proclaiming that as heard in Louisiana only Indians can understand Indian IR, for instance, and
to thus shut out foreign scholars from addressing local politics, why not enquire more deeply into the body
politics of disciplinary knowledge production and dissemination? How and why precisely scholars personal
and physical situatedness matters to understanding and explaining IR practices presents a formidable research
contribution that can cover some of the concerns implicit in the argument here, yet without resorting to implicit
essentialism. And needless to say, insights from anthropology or feminist IR might be mobilised particularly
productively for a deeper analysis of such interplays.
Similarly, rather than to give in to a reflex of rejecting hegemony and power, why not say more about their
multifaceted constitution and forms of operation? The literature does not suggest disciplinary practices to be
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Does everyone need a national IR school? Engaging the sociology of IRs most recent appropriation
28.02.16, 07:48
advanced by a homogenous group of scholars, and neither does it claim scholarship in the periphery to be
uniform or a mere recipient of Western wisdom. Whose paradigms, methods and standards become
authoritative and whose do not, and how these are transposed across cultural, linguistic and other types of
borders turning hegemony into a social reality in places such as Turkey and Romania (but also Switzerland or
the UK, for that matter) still are challenging questions to pursue. Prior to rejecting hegemony and power tout
court, their dierentiation can create interesting insights as to what and whose responsibilities are involved in
making, keeping and/or changing disciplinary authority.
And lastly, why not engage values more explicitly? Instead of claiming cultural and political inclinations of
dominant IR to be incompatible with others, it seems mandatory to be explicit about what penchants are to be
rejected, which are to be endorsed, and why. Yes, IR scholarship does have important geo-cultural penchants
little surprisingly perhaps, given it being a product of complex social contexts. Without specification of what
precisely is to be rejected about it, why, and with what it is to be substituted, however, a suspicion emerges that
the nationalisation of IR is a rather hollow strategy for bolstering a scholars own local authority, irrespective of
content. Also on this third front here, much potential hence lies in complexifying the argument, and in
developing its claims into a fuller research contribution. Without it, the retreat into national IR schools does not
strike as a terribly productive strategy.
Does everyone need a national IR school? I agree that inputs from places thus far ignored might contribute
successfully to enriching, challenging or subverting the discipline. In the same token, I also agree that some
present scholarly communities might need to become more aware of their own national penchants: Me, too, I
dont think that current US foreign policy debates (homeland security, counterinsurgency etc.) should be
mistaken for international politics writ large, for example, that the US presidential and the British Westminster
system provide useful templates for comparative analyses across continents, or that empirical IR work always
needs to rely on Anglo-Saxon case studies. Seen this way, a certain nationalisation of IR at the
epistemological level might indeed be useful and necessary.
In a reflexive manner, however, such insights should serve to contextualise and critically reflect on intellectual
penchants in the discipline, thus giving way to a learning process that can be used constructively in the
analytical schooling of students. In my understanding, such a form of critical education is much more
sustainable and it also reflects much better the key concerns of the sociology of IR research agenda than
the creation of 200 or so national IR schools and the installation of a multipolar discipline.
Jonas Hagmann is a Senior Researcher and Lecturer in International Relations at ETH Zrich. His research
focuses on local conceptualisation of world politics, with special attention to notions of international insecurity.
Jonas Hagmann is the author of (In)Security and the Production of International Relations (Routledge, 2015),
and his articles appeared in European Journal of International Relations, Security Dialogue, Critical Studies on
Terrorism and Contemporary Security Policy among others. For further information see
www.css.ethz.ch/people/CSS/hagmannj/index or https://ethz.academia.edu/JonasHagmann.
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