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The absence of non-western IR theory in Asia reconsidered

Chen, Ching-Chang
International Relations of the Asia-Pacific , Volume 11 (1) Oxford University PressJan 1, 2011

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The absence of non-western IR theory in Asia reconsidered

Abstract

This paper critically examines an ongoing debate in International Relations (IR) as to why there is apparently no non-Western IR theory in Asia and what should be done to ‘mitigate’ that situation. Its central contention is that simply calling for greater incorporation of ideas from the non-West and contributions by non-Western scholars from local ‘vantage points’ does not make IR more global or democratic, for that would do little to transform the discipline's Eurocentric epistemological foundations. Re-envisioning IR in Asia is not about discovering or producing as many ‘indigenous’ national schools of IR as possible, but about reorienting IR itself towards a post -Western era that does not reinforce the hegemony of the West within (and without) the discipline. Otherwise, even if local scholars could succeed in crafting a ‘Chinese (or Indian, Japanese, Korean, etc.) School’, it would be no more than constructing a ‘derivative discourse’ of Western modernist social science.
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/lp/oxford-university-press/the-absence-of-non-western-ir-theory-in-asia-reconsidered-0bpRABAUf8
Title
The absence of non-western IR theory in Asia reconsidered
Author(s)
Chen, Ching-Chang
Journal
International Relations of the Asia-Pacific , Volume 11 (1) Oxford University Press – Jan 1, 2011
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Copyright
Copyright © 2011 Oxford University Press
Subject
Articles
ISSN
1470-482X
eISSN
1470-4838
D.O.I.
10.1093/irap/lcq014
Publisher site
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