International Relations Theory: Contemporary Debates
The course aims at facilitating a discussion of some of the issues currently debated in International
Relations theory.
Requirements:
Active participation in the seminar - 20%
Presentation - 20%
Midterm essay (circa 5.000 words) - 30%
Final essay (circa 5.000 words) - 30%
Week 1
Seminars 1 & 2
Introduction and general discussion
PART I Theories
Week 2
Seminar 3
Hayward R. Alker and Thomas Biersteker, “The Dialectics of World Order: Notes For The Future
Archaeologist of International Savoir Faire”, International Studies Quarterly, 28, 1984: 121-42
Ole Wæver, “The Rise and Fall of the Inter-paradigm Debate” in International Theory: Positivism
and Beyond (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1996), ed. by Steve Smith, Ken Booth and
Marysia Zalewski.
Seminar 4
Cameron G. Thies, “Progress, History and Identity in International Relations Theory: The Case
of the Idealist–Realist Debate”, European Journal of International Relations, vol. 8(2), 2002: 147–
85
Brian C. Schmidt, “On the History and Historiography of International Relations”, in Handbook of
International Relations (London: SAGE, 2002), ed. Walter Carlsnaes, Thomas Risse and Beth A.
Simmons.
Week 3
Seminar 5
Emanuel Adler, “Constructivism in International Relations”, in Handbook: 95-118.
James Fearon and Alexander Wendt, “Rationalism v. Constructivism: A Skeptical View”, in
Handbook: 52-72
Seminar 6
Thomas Risse, “’Let’s Argue!’: Communicative Action in World Politics”, International
Organization, 54, 2000: 1-40
Thomas Diez and Jill Steans, “A useful dialogue? Habermas and International Relations”, Review of
International Studies, 31, 2005: 127–40
Week 4
Seminar 7
Friedrich Kratochwil, “Constructing a New Orthodoxy? Wendt’s ‘Social Theory of International
Politics’ and the Constructivist Challenge“, Millennium, 29, 2000: 73-101
Stefano Guzzini, “A Reconstruction of Constructivism in International Relations”, European
Journal of International Relations, 6, 2000: 147-82
Seminar 8
Heikki Patomäki and Colin Wight, “After Postpositivism? The Promises of Critical Realism”,
International Studies Quarterly, 44, 2001: 53-75
Roger Epp, “The English School on the Frontiers of International Society: A Hermeneutic
Recollection”, Review of International Studies, Special Issue, 1998: 47-63
Week 5
Seminar 9
Friedrich Kratochwil, “History, Action and Identity”, European Journal of International Relations,
12, 2006: 5-29.
Cynthia Weber, “Reading Martin Wight’s 'Why Is There No International Theory?' As History”,
Alternatives: Social Transformation & Humane Governance, 23, 1998: 451-70.
Seminar 10
Colin Wight, “Philosophy of Social Science and International Relations”, in Handbook: 23-51
Barry Buzan and Richard Little, “Why International Relations has Failed as an
Intellectual Project and What to do About it”, Millennium, 30, 2001: 19-39.
Week 6
Seminar 11
Roland Bleiker, “Retracing and Redrawing the Boundaries of Events: Postmodern Interferences
With International Theory”, Alternatives: Social Transformation & Humane Governance, 23, 1998:
471-98
Cynthia Weber, “IR: The Resurrection or New Frontiers of Incorporation”, European Journal of
International Relations, 5, 1999: 435–50
Seminar 12
General discussion
PART II Practices
Week 7
Seminar 13
John Ikenberry, After Victory: Institutions, Strategic Restraint, and the Rebuilding of Order After
Major Wars (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2001), Chs. 1 and 2.
Klaus Dieter Wolf, “The New Raison d’État as a Problem for Democracy in World Society”,
European Journal of International Relations, 5, 1999:: 333–63
Mathias Koenig-Archibugi, “International Governance as New Raison d’État? The Case of the EU
Common Foreign and Security Policy”, 10, 2004: 147–88
Seminar 14
Andrew Linklater, “Dialogic politics and the civilising process”, Review of International Studies,
31, 2005 : 141-54
Chantal Mouffe, “For An Agonistic Model of Democracy”, in Political Theory in Transition
(London: Routledge, 2000) ed. Noël O’Sullivan: 113-30
Week 8
Seminar 15
Richard Mansbach, “Changing Understandings of Global Politics: Preinternationalism,
Internationalism and Postinternationalism”, in Pondering Postinternationalism: A Paradigm for the
Twenty-First Century? (New Yorke: SUNY, 2000), ed. Heidi H.Hobbs: 7-24
Ronnie D. Lipschutz, “Politics Among People: Global Civil Society Reconsidered”, in
Postinternationalism: 83-98
Seminar 16
Yale Ferguson, “Postinternationalism and the Future of IR Theory”, in Postinternationalism:
197-216
Nicholas Onuf, “Habits, Skills and Grandiose Theory”, in Postinternationalism: 99-116.
Week 9
Seminar 17
Richard Little, “The English School’s Contribution to the Study of
International Relations”, European Journal of International Relations, 6, 2000:395-422.
Chris Brown, “World Society and the English School: An ‘International Society’ Perspective on
World Society”, European Journal of International Relations, 7, 2001: 423–41
Seminar 18
Barry Buzan, “The English School: An Underexploited Resource in IR”, Review of International
Studies, 27, 2001: 471-88
Tim Dunne, Emanuel Adler, Barry Buzan, Forum on Buzan’s From International Society to World
Society?, Millennium, 34, 2005: 186-99
Week 10
Seminar 19
Alexander Wendt, “Why a World State is Inevitable”, European Journal of International Relations,
9, 2003: 491–542
Vaughn P. Shannon, “Wendt’s Violation of the Constructivist Project: Agency and Why a World
State is Not Inevitable”, European Journal of International Relations, 11, 2005: 581–587
Alexander Wendt, “Agency, Teleology and the World State: A Reply to Shannon”, European
Journal of International Relations, 11, 2005 : 589–598
Seminar 20
Roland Axtmann, “Globality, Plurality and Freedom: The Arendtian Perspective”, Review of
International Studies, 32, 2006: 93-117
Barak Mendelsohn, “Sovereignty Under Attack: The International Society Meets the Al Qaeda
Network”, Review of International Studies, 31, 2005: 45-68
Week 11
Seminar 21
Jenny Edkins, “Sovereign Power, Zones of Indistinction, and the Camp”, Alternatives: Social
Transformation & Humane Governance, 25, 2000: 3-26
Michael Dillon and Julian Reid, “Global Liberal Governance: Biopolitics, Security and War”,
Millennium, 30, 2001:
Seminar 22
Discussion: Derrida - Negotiating the Legacy, Millennium, 35, 2005: 200-61.
Week 12
Seminars 23 & 24
Concluding discussion
