It is now 30 years since the publication of seminal articles
by Robert Cox and Richard Ashley, which introduced the project of
critical theory to the international relations discipline. This
2007 book brings together a team of world-class scholars to assess
the impact of critical scholarship on the discipline over this
period and point to future directions for the critical project. The
book is an authoritative overview of the current position of
critical international relations theory. It is an essential
resource for those working in critical international relations
theory and for undergraduate and graduate courses on Internal
Relations theory.
目錄:
Notes on contributors
Editors'' introduction Nicholas Rengger and Ben Thirkell-White
Looking back from somewhere: reflections on what remains ''critical''
in critical theory Friedrich Kratochwil
Transnational theories of order and change: heterodoxy in
international relations scholarship Ronen Palen
Happy anniversary! time and critique in international relations
theory Kimberly Hutchings
Is critical theory always for the white west and for western
imperialism? beyond westphilian towards a post-racist critical IR
John M. Hobson
The promise of critical IR, partially kept Craig N. Murphy
Towards a sociology of global morals with an ''emacipatory intent''
Andrew Linklater
Between kant and pufendorf: humanitarian intervention, statist
ant-cosmopolitanism and critical international theory Richard
Devetak.