Read more
This book shows how historical trajectories have shaped international politics, covering a wide range of imperial and (post-) colonial settings. For scholars and advanced students of IR, historical sociology and global politics, especially those working on the history of international politics, and the legacies of colonialism and imperialism.
List of contents
Introduction: 1. The presence of the past: imperialism and modes of historicity in international politics Klaus Schlichte and Stephan Stetter; Part I. The Imperial Past and Present in International Politics and IR: 2. Colonial origins – and legacies – of international organizations George Lawson; 3. Collective hegemony after decolonization: persistence despite delegitimation Thomas Müller; 4. The historicity of state formation: welfare services in Uganda and Cameroon Joël Glasman and Klaus Schlichte; 5. Privateering, colonialism and empires: on the forgotten origins of international order Benjamin de Carvalho and Halvard Leira; 6. Where did the Mongol empire go? The presences of a Eurasian steppe-nomadic past Einar Wigen and Iver B. Neumann; 7. Where would we be without the fog lifting in Austerlitz? Ruminations on the uses of history and sociology in IR Mathias Albert; Part II. Historical Sociology and the Imperial fundaments of international politics: 8. The afterlives of empires: notes toward an investigation George Steinmetz; 9. Divided world: encountering Frantz Fanon in Kabul Teresa Koloma Beck; 10. The Colonial origins of policing: the 'Domestic Effect' in the UK and the US Julian Go; Part III. Global History and the Imperial Fundaments of International Politics: 11. Unearthing the coloniality in the international through the genealogy of IR in Japan and beyond Tomoko Akami; 12. Was the rise of the 'Third World' a theory effect? International relations and the historicity of economic expertise Daniel Speich Chassé; 13. The past and its presence in Ottoman and post-Ottoman memory cultures: the battle of Kosovo and the status of Jerusalem Anna Vlachopoulou and Stephan Stetter; Concluding observations: 14. Conclusion: can historicism win over IR? Ayşe Zarakol.