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Decentring Global Challenges in International Relations: Interdisciplinary Perspectives Beyond the West

    • Xi'an Jiaotong-Liverpool University
    • School of Political Science and Sociology

    Research output: Book/ReportBookpeer-review

    Abstract

    This book examines contemporary global challenges from a decentring perspective, advancing an interdisciplinary conversation. International studies scholarship has become increasingly more interdisciplinary and multifocal, especially as the escalation of systemic ecological and economic crises, as well as social, and political challenges in the 21st century have required comprehensive ways of thinking and taking stock of existing ontological and epistemic limitations. A decentring approach is crucial to account for how interdependent relations across states and societies, regions and the globe, shape modernity and its global manifestations are, in an era of growing and persistent crises. The book explains why traditional hegemonic approaches to global challenges are problematic, and conceptualises what a decentring approach to global challenges entails: a deconstruction of traditional and sedimented epistemic underpinnings (implying a rethinking of agency, time, geographies, norms, topics, and loci of public attention) but also an appreciation of the mutually constructed nature of the international. This book will appeal to students and scholars of international relations (IR) and international studies who are interested in decentring, as well as those working for civil society organisations (CSOs), NGOs, and think tanks.

    Original languageEnglish
    PublisherTaylor and Francis Group
    Number of pages191
    ISBN (Electronic)9781040419380
    ISBN (Print)9781032940236
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 1 Jan 2025

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