International Relations Scholarship at 100: Publicism, Truth-Pluralism and the Usefulness Problem Cover Image
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International Relations Scholarship at 100: Publicism, Truth-Pluralism and the Usefulness Problem
International Relations Scholarship at 100: Publicism, Truth-Pluralism and the Usefulness Problem

Author(s): Nicholas Michelsen
Subject(s): Politics / Political Sciences
Published by: Ústav mezinárodních vztahů
Keywords: usefulness;1919;pluralism;publicism;international relations;IR century;IR centenary;post-truth;

Summary/Abstract: Revisionist studies have shown that stories about International Relations’ (IR) supposed disciplinary birth in 1919 function to obfuscate the history of international thought. 1919 has nonetheless cast a long shadow over how the usefulness of professional scholarship in International Relations has been conceptualised. In this article, I trace how the 1919 birth-story orientated disciplinary constructions of the usefulness of the field as they relate to pluralist approaches to truth-seeking in IR. I argue that the centenary of 1919 reminds us of the publicist as well as pluralist scholarship of the inter-war years. Our discipline’s supposed centenary should therefore foster a drive towards better communication with global IR’s publics and, in this way, ensure that we are better equipped to deal with the so-called post-truth era.

  • Issue Year: 26/2018
  • Issue No: 3
  • Page Range: 107-134
  • Page Count: 28
  • Language: English
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