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THE
NEW AGENDA OF INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
It
is a really exciting time to be studying
International Relations. For one thing,
there have been enormous changes in
the global order over the past fifteen
years or so. First we saw the end
of the Cold War, that state of hostility
between the two-superpowers (the USA
and the old Soviet Union) in 1989-90.
The old bi-polar dynamics of the state
system has been replaced by one dominant
superpower, and ever since, scholars
have been putting forward theories
to make sense of this new world order.
Then, more recently, the events of
9/11 and the response of the US leadership
have been in the intellectual spotlight.
Has the clash of Cold War ideologies
been replaced by a ‘clash of
civilisations’ or cultures,
as Samuel Huntington and other have
argued? Finally, the Iraq War has
raised a whole range of questions
and issues including: the nature of
the just war; the role of the UN;
the capacity of the EU to act as a
cohesive force; occupation and national
reconstruction; the role of ethnic/religious
tensions in a nation state; and the
nature of human rights in a theatre
of conflict. The list could go on
and on.
But
the changes in the discipline of IR
go a lot deeper than charting the
shifts in the balance of power between
nation states, commenting upon the
evolution of the global order, or
simply examining latest events. The
very way in which international relations
are defined are now subject to a lot
of intellectual debate. Should we
still see the modern state as standing
centre stage? ‘Globalisation’
is now a word on everyone’s
lips. But what does it mean? Is it
anything really new? Certainly, writers
in IR today stress activities that
are not centred on the state and which
involve international actors in their
own right. There are literally thousands
of them, concerned with issues such
as: environmental degradation; human
rights; peace keeping; aid and development;
and religious activities: to say nothing
of international corporations, financial
institutions and even those involved
in global racketeering. Moreover,
today it no longer makes sense, for
example, to talk about the classic
distinction between ‘foreign’
and ‘domestic’ policy.
We only need examine the complex policy-making
of the European Union to see how much
more complex the situation is today.
Maybe
we should replace the term ‘International
Relations’ with the broader
ranging ‘International Studies’.
Intellectual openness is now the order
of the day and IR scholars are drawing
in economists, historians, lawyers,
anthropologists, and cultural theories
– in fact just about the whole
range of social science and humanities
disciplines – in their search
for new insights and approaches
We
can draw insights from the study of
culture and feminism in their approaches
to the subject. Take the issue of
‘security’. Some - called
‘constructivists’ - now
argue that terms like ‘anarchy’
and ‘security’ are defined
so as to reflect the social conditions
and aspirations which are dominant
at any one time. They are not neutral,
value-free terms but reflect the thinking,
attitudes and goals of those who use
them. My colleague at the University
of East Anglia, Dr Nicola Pratt, for
example in her course-unit on the
Politics of the Middle East., examines
how western terms are often inappropriately
applied to the politics of that region.
Similarly, feminists complain that
orthodox approaches to ‘security’,
define it in terms in terms of state
security, traditionally seen in (male),
militaristic terms. Instead feminists
stress the extent to which such factors
as poverty, violence, ill-health,
poor working conditions and general
cultural attitudes afflict the lives
of women around the world.
Finally,
there has been a renewed interest
in the moral dimension of international
studies. Are human rights culturally
defined so that ‘Asian Values’
mean that human rights should be defined
differently in Asia than they are
in Europe or America? Or, on the contrary,
should human rights remain universally
constant everywhere? What form of
justice should be pursued in the international
arena? How should we meet the challenges
posed by such problems as climate
change, the spread of AIDS, international
crime and growing inequalities of
wealth?
By
choosing to study International Studies,
you will be in for an exciting time!
And where better to choose to do so
than in the UK with its historical
links and intellectual connections
with Europe, America, Asia and Africa?
Professor
Stephanie Lawson.
Stephanie Lawson is Professor
of International Relations of the
Asia Pacific Region at the University
of East Anglia. Her present research
covers issues to do with democracy
and democratisation, nationalism and
ethnicity, and the politics of culture,
especially in relation to the Asia-Pacific
region and its relations with ‘the
West’ . She is author of a recent
authoritative textbook International
Relations (Polity 2003) and has edited
The New Agenda for International Relations:
From Polarization to Globalization
in World Politics? (Polity Press,
2002).
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