On the subject matter of International Relations

This article deals with the subject matter of International Relations as an academic discipline. It addresses the issue of whether and how one or many realms could legitimately be claimed as the discipline’s prime subject. It first raises a number of problems associated with both identifying the sub...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inReview of international studies Vol. 43; no. 5; pp. 898 - 917
Main Authors Albert, Mathias, Buzan, Barry
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Cambridge, UK Cambridge University Press 01.12.2017
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Summary:This article deals with the subject matter of International Relations as an academic discipline. It addresses the issue of whether and how one or many realms could legitimately be claimed as the discipline’s prime subject. It first raises a number of problems associated with both identifying the subject matter of IR and ‘labelling’ the discipline in relation to competing terms and disciplines, followed by a discussion on whether, and to what degree, IR takes its identity from a confluence of disciplinary traditions or from a distinct methodology. It then outlines two possibilities that would lead to identifying IR as a discipline defined by a specific realm in distinction to other disciplines: (1) the ‘international’ as a specific realm of the social world, functionally differentiated from other realms; (2) IR as being about everything in the social world above a particular scale. The final section discusses the implications of these views for the study of International Relations.
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ISSN:0260-2105
1469-9044
DOI:10.1017/S0260210517000262