Knowledge and Expertise in International Politics
Knowledge and Expertise in International Politics
A Handbook
Kaczmarska, Katarzyna; Bliesemann de Guevara, Berit; Warnecke, Andrea; Poopuu, Birgit; Kurowska, Xymena
Oxford University Press
12/2025
1104
Dura
Inglês
9780192871145
15 a 20 dias
Descrição não disponível.
Cynthia Enloe: Foreword
1: Berit Bliesemann de Guevara, Katarzyna Kaczmarska, Xymena Kurowska, Birgit Poopuu, and Andrea Warnecke: Introduction: Studying International Politics Through the Lens of Knowledge and Expertise
PART I: KNOWLEDGE DEBATES IN INTERNATIONAL POLITICS
2: Vineet Thakur: International Politics by Other Means: The Role of the Scholar in IR
3: Beate Jahn: International Relations Knowledge and Practice: The Crisis of Critical Theory?
4: Kimberly Hutchings: Gender and Knowledge (Re)Production in International Thought
5: David L. Blaney and Arlene B. Tickner: Worlding and Worlds
6: Dagmar Vorli%cek: Science and International Relations: Knowing and Making the International
7: Matthias Gross: Not Knowing as Expertise: Knowledge and the Politics of Ignorance
8: Werner Distler and Mariam Salehi: Knowing Violence in International Politics
9: Ingvild Bode and Hendrik Huelss: 'Artificial Intelligence' and the Production of Knowledge and Expertise in International Relations
10: Audrey Alejandro: Studying Knowledge: An Analytical Guide for International Politics
11: Siddharth Tripathi: Coloniality of Knowledge (Re)Production: Individual Entanglements and Collective Solidarities in Epistemic North-South Relationships
PART II: ACTOR-CENTRED APPROACHES
12: Andrea Warnecke and Berit Bliesemann de Guevara: Actor-Centred Approaches to Knowledge and Expertise in International Politics
13: Katharina Glaab and Nele Kortendiek: The Politics of Knowledge Production in International Organizations
14: Mikkel Jarle Christensen and Mikael Rask Madsen: Legal Knowledge and Expertise in International Politics
15: Andrea Warnecke: Informal Ties and Expertise in Global Crisis Governance: An Exploration of Network Methodologies
16: Roland Kosti'c and Berit Bliesemann de Guevara: Intimate Networks and Strategic Knowledge in Peacebuilding Interventions
17: %Sarka Waisova: Deep Co-Production of Human Security at the Science-Politics Nexus
18: Justyna Bandola-Gill: Quantified Expertise: Connecting Science and Politics in Global Governance
19: Rolf Lidskog and Goeran Sundqvist: From Product to Process: Science and the Making of International Environmental Governance
PART III: PRACTICE APPROACHES
20: Berit Bliesemann de Guevara and Andrea Warnecke: Practice Approaches to Knowledge and Expertise in International Politics
21: Trine Villumsen Berling: The Embedded Study of International Knowledge Practices: Towards a Methodology of Ironic Immersion
22: Janice Gross Stein: Thinking, Feeling, and Choosing: Pragmatism, Political Psychology, and the Intelligence Community
23: Saara Saermae and Juha A. Vuori: Arts-Based Methods in IR: What Knowledges Become Possible
24: Annabelle Littoz-Monnet: The Co-Production of Expertise in Global Governance
25: Christine Andrae: Producing Knowledge to Problematize War: A Foucauldian Approach to Knowledge Practices
26: Maria Fernanda Olarte-Sierra: Forensic Experts and Knowledge Practices in Transitional Justice Scenarios
27: Rocco Bellanova and Linda Monsees: Algorithmic Knowledge and International Politics
28: Maria Martin de Almagro: Assembling Knowledge Through Pilot Projects and Massive Open Online Courses in International Policymaking
29: Jan-Peter Voss: Instrument Constituencies and Spaces of Knowing Governance
30: Nikolas Kosmatopoulos and Chloe Nasr: War and Peace: Techno-Political Assemblages in the Postcolonial Middle East
PART IV: CONTEXT-CENTRED APPROACHES
31: Katarzyna Kaczmarska: Context-Centred Approaches to Knowledge and Expertise in International Politics
32: Beverley Loke and Catherine Owen: Hierarchies and Contexts in International Relations Knowledge Production
33: Yong-Soo Eun: A Broadening of International Relations: Knowledge Production Beyond West-Centrism
34: Cai Wilkinson: Queer Knowing and Knowledge: The Case of Queer IR
35: Christian Reus-Smit: The Problem with Cultural Contexts
36: Katarzyna Kaczmarska: Academic Freedom and the Contexts of Knowledge Production
37: Martin Mueller and Alexandra Yatsyk: The Global Easts in the Geopolitics of Knowledge: The Decolonial Imperative
38: Paulo Ravecca and Camilo Lopez Burian: The Politics of International Relations: Glimpses from Chile and Uruguay
39: Ari Jerrems, Mariela Cuadro, and Melody Fonseca: The Everyday Practices of Making a Global Discipline
40: Beatrix Futak-Campbell: Creating a Global International Relations Section at the International Studies Association
41: Alexander Ruser: Experts and Public Trust in the Policy Field of Climate Change
PART V: STRUCTURAL APPROACHES
42: Birgit Poopuu and Xymena Kurowska: Structural Approaches to Knowledge and Expertise in International Politics
43: Birgit Poopuu, Elisabeth Schweiger, and Elena Simon: The Violens in International Relations: Can We Produce Knowledge Differently?
44: Luis Aue: Knowledge Regimes and the Postcolonial Hierarchies of International Health Quantification
45: Claudia Aradau, Lucrezia Canzutti, and Sarah Perret: Regimes of Power/Non-Knowledge in Global Politics
46: Victor Anas and Suda Perera: Experts in Conflict: Having Been There but Not Being From There
47: Jamie J. Hagen, Anupama Ranawana, and Emma Pritchard: Queering Humanitarian Response Through LGBTIQ People's Expertise
48: Alf Gunvald Nilsen and Laurence Cox: Social Movements and Insurgent Social Theory: Making Theoretical Knowledge Through Collective Action
49: Michael Merlingen: EU Foreign Policy Ideas as International Relations of Domination: A Neo-Gramscian Perspective
50: Gloria Novovi'c: Poverty, Inequality, and Knowledge in Development Politics
PART VI: RELATIONAL APPROACHES
51: Xymena Kurowska and Birgit Poopuu: Relational Approaches to Knowledge and Expertise in International Politics
52: Patrick Thaddeus Jackson and Sujin Heo: Ways of Knowing: A Relational Account
53: Emilian Kavalski: Relationality with Asian Characteristics? Healing the Columbus Syndrome of International Relations
54: Emma Mc Cluskey: Anthropological Approaches to Knowledge in International Politics
55: Alistair Markland: Fielding Knowledge: The Problematic Case of Human Rights Advocacy and Genocide Labelling
56: Anna Danielsson: Field Methodology and the Relational Emergence of an 'Interventionary Object'
57: Linda Ahaell: Being as a Mode of Knowing: Feminist Knowledge on Affect
58: Aytak Dibavar: Transnational Feminist Solidarity: Story as a Relational Approach to Knowledge Production
59: Erika Cudworth and Stephen Hobden: Complexity Thinking, Posthumanism, and International Relations Knowledge
60: Amaya Querejazu: Pluriversal Knowledge and Shamans: The Aymara Yatiris as Knowers and Diplomats
PART VII: DISRUPTIONS AND MEDITATIONS
61: Milja Kurki: Cosmologies, Sciences, Planetary Politics: Reflections on 'Knowledge' in New Registers
62: Jonathan Luke Austin and Anna Leander: The Future of Academic Expertise: Speculative European Bureaucratic Fabulations
63: Amal Abu-Bakare: Racism and Racialization in International Relations Knowledge
64: Toni %Cerkez, James Finnis, Milja Kurki, Helen Miles, and Joseph Thurgate: Reflections on Imagination of Future and AI
65: Thomas Fetzer, Xymena Kurowska, and Kateryna Zarembo: Hermeneutical Ignorance and 'Strong Objectivity' in Knowledge Production about the Russo-Ukrainian War
66: Philip Conway: The Necessity of Being Negative: Critique and Care in the Anthropocene
67: Berit Bliesemann de Guevara, Katarzyna Kaczmarska, Xymena Kurowska, Birgit Poopuu, and Andrea Warnecke: Creating Knowledge by Editing a Handbook: A Self-Critical Reflection
1: Berit Bliesemann de Guevara, Katarzyna Kaczmarska, Xymena Kurowska, Birgit Poopuu, and Andrea Warnecke: Introduction: Studying International Politics Through the Lens of Knowledge and Expertise
PART I: KNOWLEDGE DEBATES IN INTERNATIONAL POLITICS
2: Vineet Thakur: International Politics by Other Means: The Role of the Scholar in IR
3: Beate Jahn: International Relations Knowledge and Practice: The Crisis of Critical Theory?
4: Kimberly Hutchings: Gender and Knowledge (Re)Production in International Thought
5: David L. Blaney and Arlene B. Tickner: Worlding and Worlds
6: Dagmar Vorli%cek: Science and International Relations: Knowing and Making the International
7: Matthias Gross: Not Knowing as Expertise: Knowledge and the Politics of Ignorance
8: Werner Distler and Mariam Salehi: Knowing Violence in International Politics
9: Ingvild Bode and Hendrik Huelss: 'Artificial Intelligence' and the Production of Knowledge and Expertise in International Relations
10: Audrey Alejandro: Studying Knowledge: An Analytical Guide for International Politics
11: Siddharth Tripathi: Coloniality of Knowledge (Re)Production: Individual Entanglements and Collective Solidarities in Epistemic North-South Relationships
PART II: ACTOR-CENTRED APPROACHES
12: Andrea Warnecke and Berit Bliesemann de Guevara: Actor-Centred Approaches to Knowledge and Expertise in International Politics
13: Katharina Glaab and Nele Kortendiek: The Politics of Knowledge Production in International Organizations
14: Mikkel Jarle Christensen and Mikael Rask Madsen: Legal Knowledge and Expertise in International Politics
15: Andrea Warnecke: Informal Ties and Expertise in Global Crisis Governance: An Exploration of Network Methodologies
16: Roland Kosti'c and Berit Bliesemann de Guevara: Intimate Networks and Strategic Knowledge in Peacebuilding Interventions
17: %Sarka Waisova: Deep Co-Production of Human Security at the Science-Politics Nexus
18: Justyna Bandola-Gill: Quantified Expertise: Connecting Science and Politics in Global Governance
19: Rolf Lidskog and Goeran Sundqvist: From Product to Process: Science and the Making of International Environmental Governance
PART III: PRACTICE APPROACHES
20: Berit Bliesemann de Guevara and Andrea Warnecke: Practice Approaches to Knowledge and Expertise in International Politics
21: Trine Villumsen Berling: The Embedded Study of International Knowledge Practices: Towards a Methodology of Ironic Immersion
22: Janice Gross Stein: Thinking, Feeling, and Choosing: Pragmatism, Political Psychology, and the Intelligence Community
23: Saara Saermae and Juha A. Vuori: Arts-Based Methods in IR: What Knowledges Become Possible
24: Annabelle Littoz-Monnet: The Co-Production of Expertise in Global Governance
25: Christine Andrae: Producing Knowledge to Problematize War: A Foucauldian Approach to Knowledge Practices
26: Maria Fernanda Olarte-Sierra: Forensic Experts and Knowledge Practices in Transitional Justice Scenarios
27: Rocco Bellanova and Linda Monsees: Algorithmic Knowledge and International Politics
28: Maria Martin de Almagro: Assembling Knowledge Through Pilot Projects and Massive Open Online Courses in International Policymaking
29: Jan-Peter Voss: Instrument Constituencies and Spaces of Knowing Governance
30: Nikolas Kosmatopoulos and Chloe Nasr: War and Peace: Techno-Political Assemblages in the Postcolonial Middle East
PART IV: CONTEXT-CENTRED APPROACHES
31: Katarzyna Kaczmarska: Context-Centred Approaches to Knowledge and Expertise in International Politics
32: Beverley Loke and Catherine Owen: Hierarchies and Contexts in International Relations Knowledge Production
33: Yong-Soo Eun: A Broadening of International Relations: Knowledge Production Beyond West-Centrism
34: Cai Wilkinson: Queer Knowing and Knowledge: The Case of Queer IR
35: Christian Reus-Smit: The Problem with Cultural Contexts
36: Katarzyna Kaczmarska: Academic Freedom and the Contexts of Knowledge Production
37: Martin Mueller and Alexandra Yatsyk: The Global Easts in the Geopolitics of Knowledge: The Decolonial Imperative
38: Paulo Ravecca and Camilo Lopez Burian: The Politics of International Relations: Glimpses from Chile and Uruguay
39: Ari Jerrems, Mariela Cuadro, and Melody Fonseca: The Everyday Practices of Making a Global Discipline
40: Beatrix Futak-Campbell: Creating a Global International Relations Section at the International Studies Association
41: Alexander Ruser: Experts and Public Trust in the Policy Field of Climate Change
PART V: STRUCTURAL APPROACHES
42: Birgit Poopuu and Xymena Kurowska: Structural Approaches to Knowledge and Expertise in International Politics
43: Birgit Poopuu, Elisabeth Schweiger, and Elena Simon: The Violens in International Relations: Can We Produce Knowledge Differently?
44: Luis Aue: Knowledge Regimes and the Postcolonial Hierarchies of International Health Quantification
45: Claudia Aradau, Lucrezia Canzutti, and Sarah Perret: Regimes of Power/Non-Knowledge in Global Politics
46: Victor Anas and Suda Perera: Experts in Conflict: Having Been There but Not Being From There
47: Jamie J. Hagen, Anupama Ranawana, and Emma Pritchard: Queering Humanitarian Response Through LGBTIQ People's Expertise
48: Alf Gunvald Nilsen and Laurence Cox: Social Movements and Insurgent Social Theory: Making Theoretical Knowledge Through Collective Action
49: Michael Merlingen: EU Foreign Policy Ideas as International Relations of Domination: A Neo-Gramscian Perspective
50: Gloria Novovi'c: Poverty, Inequality, and Knowledge in Development Politics
PART VI: RELATIONAL APPROACHES
51: Xymena Kurowska and Birgit Poopuu: Relational Approaches to Knowledge and Expertise in International Politics
52: Patrick Thaddeus Jackson and Sujin Heo: Ways of Knowing: A Relational Account
53: Emilian Kavalski: Relationality with Asian Characteristics? Healing the Columbus Syndrome of International Relations
54: Emma Mc Cluskey: Anthropological Approaches to Knowledge in International Politics
55: Alistair Markland: Fielding Knowledge: The Problematic Case of Human Rights Advocacy and Genocide Labelling
56: Anna Danielsson: Field Methodology and the Relational Emergence of an 'Interventionary Object'
57: Linda Ahaell: Being as a Mode of Knowing: Feminist Knowledge on Affect
58: Aytak Dibavar: Transnational Feminist Solidarity: Story as a Relational Approach to Knowledge Production
59: Erika Cudworth and Stephen Hobden: Complexity Thinking, Posthumanism, and International Relations Knowledge
60: Amaya Querejazu: Pluriversal Knowledge and Shamans: The Aymara Yatiris as Knowers and Diplomats
PART VII: DISRUPTIONS AND MEDITATIONS
61: Milja Kurki: Cosmologies, Sciences, Planetary Politics: Reflections on 'Knowledge' in New Registers
62: Jonathan Luke Austin and Anna Leander: The Future of Academic Expertise: Speculative European Bureaucratic Fabulations
63: Amal Abu-Bakare: Racism and Racialization in International Relations Knowledge
64: Toni %Cerkez, James Finnis, Milja Kurki, Helen Miles, and Joseph Thurgate: Reflections on Imagination of Future and AI
65: Thomas Fetzer, Xymena Kurowska, and Kateryna Zarembo: Hermeneutical Ignorance and 'Strong Objectivity' in Knowledge Production about the Russo-Ukrainian War
66: Philip Conway: The Necessity of Being Negative: Critique and Care in the Anthropocene
67: Berit Bliesemann de Guevara, Katarzyna Kaczmarska, Xymena Kurowska, Birgit Poopuu, and Andrea Warnecke: Creating Knowledge by Editing a Handbook: A Self-Critical Reflection
Este título pertence ao(s) assunto(s) indicados(s). Para ver outros títulos clique no assunto desejado.
Cynthia Enloe: Foreword
1: Berit Bliesemann de Guevara, Katarzyna Kaczmarska, Xymena Kurowska, Birgit Poopuu, and Andrea Warnecke: Introduction: Studying International Politics Through the Lens of Knowledge and Expertise
PART I: KNOWLEDGE DEBATES IN INTERNATIONAL POLITICS
2: Vineet Thakur: International Politics by Other Means: The Role of the Scholar in IR
3: Beate Jahn: International Relations Knowledge and Practice: The Crisis of Critical Theory?
4: Kimberly Hutchings: Gender and Knowledge (Re)Production in International Thought
5: David L. Blaney and Arlene B. Tickner: Worlding and Worlds
6: Dagmar Vorli%cek: Science and International Relations: Knowing and Making the International
7: Matthias Gross: Not Knowing as Expertise: Knowledge and the Politics of Ignorance
8: Werner Distler and Mariam Salehi: Knowing Violence in International Politics
9: Ingvild Bode and Hendrik Huelss: 'Artificial Intelligence' and the Production of Knowledge and Expertise in International Relations
10: Audrey Alejandro: Studying Knowledge: An Analytical Guide for International Politics
11: Siddharth Tripathi: Coloniality of Knowledge (Re)Production: Individual Entanglements and Collective Solidarities in Epistemic North-South Relationships
PART II: ACTOR-CENTRED APPROACHES
12: Andrea Warnecke and Berit Bliesemann de Guevara: Actor-Centred Approaches to Knowledge and Expertise in International Politics
13: Katharina Glaab and Nele Kortendiek: The Politics of Knowledge Production in International Organizations
14: Mikkel Jarle Christensen and Mikael Rask Madsen: Legal Knowledge and Expertise in International Politics
15: Andrea Warnecke: Informal Ties and Expertise in Global Crisis Governance: An Exploration of Network Methodologies
16: Roland Kosti'c and Berit Bliesemann de Guevara: Intimate Networks and Strategic Knowledge in Peacebuilding Interventions
17: %Sarka Waisova: Deep Co-Production of Human Security at the Science-Politics Nexus
18: Justyna Bandola-Gill: Quantified Expertise: Connecting Science and Politics in Global Governance
19: Rolf Lidskog and Goeran Sundqvist: From Product to Process: Science and the Making of International Environmental Governance
PART III: PRACTICE APPROACHES
20: Berit Bliesemann de Guevara and Andrea Warnecke: Practice Approaches to Knowledge and Expertise in International Politics
21: Trine Villumsen Berling: The Embedded Study of International Knowledge Practices: Towards a Methodology of Ironic Immersion
22: Janice Gross Stein: Thinking, Feeling, and Choosing: Pragmatism, Political Psychology, and the Intelligence Community
23: Saara Saermae and Juha A. Vuori: Arts-Based Methods in IR: What Knowledges Become Possible
24: Annabelle Littoz-Monnet: The Co-Production of Expertise in Global Governance
25: Christine Andrae: Producing Knowledge to Problematize War: A Foucauldian Approach to Knowledge Practices
26: Maria Fernanda Olarte-Sierra: Forensic Experts and Knowledge Practices in Transitional Justice Scenarios
27: Rocco Bellanova and Linda Monsees: Algorithmic Knowledge and International Politics
28: Maria Martin de Almagro: Assembling Knowledge Through Pilot Projects and Massive Open Online Courses in International Policymaking
29: Jan-Peter Voss: Instrument Constituencies and Spaces of Knowing Governance
30: Nikolas Kosmatopoulos and Chloe Nasr: War and Peace: Techno-Political Assemblages in the Postcolonial Middle East
PART IV: CONTEXT-CENTRED APPROACHES
31: Katarzyna Kaczmarska: Context-Centred Approaches to Knowledge and Expertise in International Politics
32: Beverley Loke and Catherine Owen: Hierarchies and Contexts in International Relations Knowledge Production
33: Yong-Soo Eun: A Broadening of International Relations: Knowledge Production Beyond West-Centrism
34: Cai Wilkinson: Queer Knowing and Knowledge: The Case of Queer IR
35: Christian Reus-Smit: The Problem with Cultural Contexts
36: Katarzyna Kaczmarska: Academic Freedom and the Contexts of Knowledge Production
37: Martin Mueller and Alexandra Yatsyk: The Global Easts in the Geopolitics of Knowledge: The Decolonial Imperative
38: Paulo Ravecca and Camilo Lopez Burian: The Politics of International Relations: Glimpses from Chile and Uruguay
39: Ari Jerrems, Mariela Cuadro, and Melody Fonseca: The Everyday Practices of Making a Global Discipline
40: Beatrix Futak-Campbell: Creating a Global International Relations Section at the International Studies Association
41: Alexander Ruser: Experts and Public Trust in the Policy Field of Climate Change
PART V: STRUCTURAL APPROACHES
42: Birgit Poopuu and Xymena Kurowska: Structural Approaches to Knowledge and Expertise in International Politics
43: Birgit Poopuu, Elisabeth Schweiger, and Elena Simon: The Violens in International Relations: Can We Produce Knowledge Differently?
44: Luis Aue: Knowledge Regimes and the Postcolonial Hierarchies of International Health Quantification
45: Claudia Aradau, Lucrezia Canzutti, and Sarah Perret: Regimes of Power/Non-Knowledge in Global Politics
46: Victor Anas and Suda Perera: Experts in Conflict: Having Been There but Not Being From There
47: Jamie J. Hagen, Anupama Ranawana, and Emma Pritchard: Queering Humanitarian Response Through LGBTIQ People's Expertise
48: Alf Gunvald Nilsen and Laurence Cox: Social Movements and Insurgent Social Theory: Making Theoretical Knowledge Through Collective Action
49: Michael Merlingen: EU Foreign Policy Ideas as International Relations of Domination: A Neo-Gramscian Perspective
50: Gloria Novovi'c: Poverty, Inequality, and Knowledge in Development Politics
PART VI: RELATIONAL APPROACHES
51: Xymena Kurowska and Birgit Poopuu: Relational Approaches to Knowledge and Expertise in International Politics
52: Patrick Thaddeus Jackson and Sujin Heo: Ways of Knowing: A Relational Account
53: Emilian Kavalski: Relationality with Asian Characteristics? Healing the Columbus Syndrome of International Relations
54: Emma Mc Cluskey: Anthropological Approaches to Knowledge in International Politics
55: Alistair Markland: Fielding Knowledge: The Problematic Case of Human Rights Advocacy and Genocide Labelling
56: Anna Danielsson: Field Methodology and the Relational Emergence of an 'Interventionary Object'
57: Linda Ahaell: Being as a Mode of Knowing: Feminist Knowledge on Affect
58: Aytak Dibavar: Transnational Feminist Solidarity: Story as a Relational Approach to Knowledge Production
59: Erika Cudworth and Stephen Hobden: Complexity Thinking, Posthumanism, and International Relations Knowledge
60: Amaya Querejazu: Pluriversal Knowledge and Shamans: The Aymara Yatiris as Knowers and Diplomats
PART VII: DISRUPTIONS AND MEDITATIONS
61: Milja Kurki: Cosmologies, Sciences, Planetary Politics: Reflections on 'Knowledge' in New Registers
62: Jonathan Luke Austin and Anna Leander: The Future of Academic Expertise: Speculative European Bureaucratic Fabulations
63: Amal Abu-Bakare: Racism and Racialization in International Relations Knowledge
64: Toni %Cerkez, James Finnis, Milja Kurki, Helen Miles, and Joseph Thurgate: Reflections on Imagination of Future and AI
65: Thomas Fetzer, Xymena Kurowska, and Kateryna Zarembo: Hermeneutical Ignorance and 'Strong Objectivity' in Knowledge Production about the Russo-Ukrainian War
66: Philip Conway: The Necessity of Being Negative: Critique and Care in the Anthropocene
67: Berit Bliesemann de Guevara, Katarzyna Kaczmarska, Xymena Kurowska, Birgit Poopuu, and Andrea Warnecke: Creating Knowledge by Editing a Handbook: A Self-Critical Reflection
1: Berit Bliesemann de Guevara, Katarzyna Kaczmarska, Xymena Kurowska, Birgit Poopuu, and Andrea Warnecke: Introduction: Studying International Politics Through the Lens of Knowledge and Expertise
PART I: KNOWLEDGE DEBATES IN INTERNATIONAL POLITICS
2: Vineet Thakur: International Politics by Other Means: The Role of the Scholar in IR
3: Beate Jahn: International Relations Knowledge and Practice: The Crisis of Critical Theory?
4: Kimberly Hutchings: Gender and Knowledge (Re)Production in International Thought
5: David L. Blaney and Arlene B. Tickner: Worlding and Worlds
6: Dagmar Vorli%cek: Science and International Relations: Knowing and Making the International
7: Matthias Gross: Not Knowing as Expertise: Knowledge and the Politics of Ignorance
8: Werner Distler and Mariam Salehi: Knowing Violence in International Politics
9: Ingvild Bode and Hendrik Huelss: 'Artificial Intelligence' and the Production of Knowledge and Expertise in International Relations
10: Audrey Alejandro: Studying Knowledge: An Analytical Guide for International Politics
11: Siddharth Tripathi: Coloniality of Knowledge (Re)Production: Individual Entanglements and Collective Solidarities in Epistemic North-South Relationships
PART II: ACTOR-CENTRED APPROACHES
12: Andrea Warnecke and Berit Bliesemann de Guevara: Actor-Centred Approaches to Knowledge and Expertise in International Politics
13: Katharina Glaab and Nele Kortendiek: The Politics of Knowledge Production in International Organizations
14: Mikkel Jarle Christensen and Mikael Rask Madsen: Legal Knowledge and Expertise in International Politics
15: Andrea Warnecke: Informal Ties and Expertise in Global Crisis Governance: An Exploration of Network Methodologies
16: Roland Kosti'c and Berit Bliesemann de Guevara: Intimate Networks and Strategic Knowledge in Peacebuilding Interventions
17: %Sarka Waisova: Deep Co-Production of Human Security at the Science-Politics Nexus
18: Justyna Bandola-Gill: Quantified Expertise: Connecting Science and Politics in Global Governance
19: Rolf Lidskog and Goeran Sundqvist: From Product to Process: Science and the Making of International Environmental Governance
PART III: PRACTICE APPROACHES
20: Berit Bliesemann de Guevara and Andrea Warnecke: Practice Approaches to Knowledge and Expertise in International Politics
21: Trine Villumsen Berling: The Embedded Study of International Knowledge Practices: Towards a Methodology of Ironic Immersion
22: Janice Gross Stein: Thinking, Feeling, and Choosing: Pragmatism, Political Psychology, and the Intelligence Community
23: Saara Saermae and Juha A. Vuori: Arts-Based Methods in IR: What Knowledges Become Possible
24: Annabelle Littoz-Monnet: The Co-Production of Expertise in Global Governance
25: Christine Andrae: Producing Knowledge to Problematize War: A Foucauldian Approach to Knowledge Practices
26: Maria Fernanda Olarte-Sierra: Forensic Experts and Knowledge Practices in Transitional Justice Scenarios
27: Rocco Bellanova and Linda Monsees: Algorithmic Knowledge and International Politics
28: Maria Martin de Almagro: Assembling Knowledge Through Pilot Projects and Massive Open Online Courses in International Policymaking
29: Jan-Peter Voss: Instrument Constituencies and Spaces of Knowing Governance
30: Nikolas Kosmatopoulos and Chloe Nasr: War and Peace: Techno-Political Assemblages in the Postcolonial Middle East
PART IV: CONTEXT-CENTRED APPROACHES
31: Katarzyna Kaczmarska: Context-Centred Approaches to Knowledge and Expertise in International Politics
32: Beverley Loke and Catherine Owen: Hierarchies and Contexts in International Relations Knowledge Production
33: Yong-Soo Eun: A Broadening of International Relations: Knowledge Production Beyond West-Centrism
34: Cai Wilkinson: Queer Knowing and Knowledge: The Case of Queer IR
35: Christian Reus-Smit: The Problem with Cultural Contexts
36: Katarzyna Kaczmarska: Academic Freedom and the Contexts of Knowledge Production
37: Martin Mueller and Alexandra Yatsyk: The Global Easts in the Geopolitics of Knowledge: The Decolonial Imperative
38: Paulo Ravecca and Camilo Lopez Burian: The Politics of International Relations: Glimpses from Chile and Uruguay
39: Ari Jerrems, Mariela Cuadro, and Melody Fonseca: The Everyday Practices of Making a Global Discipline
40: Beatrix Futak-Campbell: Creating a Global International Relations Section at the International Studies Association
41: Alexander Ruser: Experts and Public Trust in the Policy Field of Climate Change
PART V: STRUCTURAL APPROACHES
42: Birgit Poopuu and Xymena Kurowska: Structural Approaches to Knowledge and Expertise in International Politics
43: Birgit Poopuu, Elisabeth Schweiger, and Elena Simon: The Violens in International Relations: Can We Produce Knowledge Differently?
44: Luis Aue: Knowledge Regimes and the Postcolonial Hierarchies of International Health Quantification
45: Claudia Aradau, Lucrezia Canzutti, and Sarah Perret: Regimes of Power/Non-Knowledge in Global Politics
46: Victor Anas and Suda Perera: Experts in Conflict: Having Been There but Not Being From There
47: Jamie J. Hagen, Anupama Ranawana, and Emma Pritchard: Queering Humanitarian Response Through LGBTIQ People's Expertise
48: Alf Gunvald Nilsen and Laurence Cox: Social Movements and Insurgent Social Theory: Making Theoretical Knowledge Through Collective Action
49: Michael Merlingen: EU Foreign Policy Ideas as International Relations of Domination: A Neo-Gramscian Perspective
50: Gloria Novovi'c: Poverty, Inequality, and Knowledge in Development Politics
PART VI: RELATIONAL APPROACHES
51: Xymena Kurowska and Birgit Poopuu: Relational Approaches to Knowledge and Expertise in International Politics
52: Patrick Thaddeus Jackson and Sujin Heo: Ways of Knowing: A Relational Account
53: Emilian Kavalski: Relationality with Asian Characteristics? Healing the Columbus Syndrome of International Relations
54: Emma Mc Cluskey: Anthropological Approaches to Knowledge in International Politics
55: Alistair Markland: Fielding Knowledge: The Problematic Case of Human Rights Advocacy and Genocide Labelling
56: Anna Danielsson: Field Methodology and the Relational Emergence of an 'Interventionary Object'
57: Linda Ahaell: Being as a Mode of Knowing: Feminist Knowledge on Affect
58: Aytak Dibavar: Transnational Feminist Solidarity: Story as a Relational Approach to Knowledge Production
59: Erika Cudworth and Stephen Hobden: Complexity Thinking, Posthumanism, and International Relations Knowledge
60: Amaya Querejazu: Pluriversal Knowledge and Shamans: The Aymara Yatiris as Knowers and Diplomats
PART VII: DISRUPTIONS AND MEDITATIONS
61: Milja Kurki: Cosmologies, Sciences, Planetary Politics: Reflections on 'Knowledge' in New Registers
62: Jonathan Luke Austin and Anna Leander: The Future of Academic Expertise: Speculative European Bureaucratic Fabulations
63: Amal Abu-Bakare: Racism and Racialization in International Relations Knowledge
64: Toni %Cerkez, James Finnis, Milja Kurki, Helen Miles, and Joseph Thurgate: Reflections on Imagination of Future and AI
65: Thomas Fetzer, Xymena Kurowska, and Kateryna Zarembo: Hermeneutical Ignorance and 'Strong Objectivity' in Knowledge Production about the Russo-Ukrainian War
66: Philip Conway: The Necessity of Being Negative: Critique and Care in the Anthropocene
67: Berit Bliesemann de Guevara, Katarzyna Kaczmarska, Xymena Kurowska, Birgit Poopuu, and Andrea Warnecke: Creating Knowledge by Editing a Handbook: A Self-Critical Reflection
Este título pertence ao(s) assunto(s) indicados(s). Para ver outros títulos clique no assunto desejado.