|
Showing 1 - 4 of
4 matches in All Departments
Pioneering a hermeneutic methodology for analyses of global
governance, this is the first monograph that makes Hans-Georg
Gadamer's and Paul Ricoeur's hermeneutic philosophy relevant for
global politics research. Drawing on the concept of "horizon" as
the element that captures the dynamics of understanding in social
interaction in order to analyse processes of international
politics, this book shows that what is required is the embeddedness
of meanings and ideas in human action and reflection. By advancing
theory-building with regard to particular questions of global
governance, it reconceptualises international relations as
"politics among people". Providing a contextualised constructivist
approach that highlights the importance of processes to which
people are central, it challenges the use of collective concepts
such as "state" and "nation" as units of analysis which continue to
dominate international relations but which cloud the details of
interaction processes. The two case studies of UN Convention on the
Law of the Sea and Germany in NATO's mission "Operation Allied
Force" in Kosovo in 1999 are structured around this contextualised
constructivist approach developed in the monograph. The studies
reveal how interaction processes can be made accountable, leading
to new vantage points of our understanding of governance problems.
This book will be of interest to scholars interested in global
governance, the work of Hans-Georg Gadamer, Paul Ricoeeur and
hermeneutic philosophy, the UN, humanitarian interventions, and
foreign policy analysts.
This handbook provides a unique opportunity to bring together
several different strings of debates, especially useful to the
growing focus on responsibility which increasingly demands
interdisciplinary approaches. It focuses on practices and
normativity in ways that are often overlooked by a focus on
accountability. It highlights the contested meaning of
responsibility. In addition to its academic purpose, it may also
prove of interest to policy-makers, think tanks, policy research
institutes.
Pioneering a hermeneutic methodology for analyses of global
governance, this is the first monograph that makes Hans-Georg
Gadamer's and Paul Ricoeur's hermeneutic philosophy relevant for
global politics research. Drawing on the concept of "horizon" as
the element that captures the dynamics of understanding in social
interaction in order to analyse processes of international
politics, this book shows that what is required is the embeddedness
of meanings and ideas in human action and reflection. By advancing
theory-building with regard to particular questions of global
governance, it reconceptualises international relations as
"politics among people". Providing a contextualised constructivist
approach that highlights the importance of processes to which
people are central, it challenges the use of collective concepts
such as "state" and "nation" as units of analysis which continue to
dominate international relations but which cloud the details of
interaction processes. The two case studies of UN Convention on the
Law of the Sea and Germany in NATO's mission "Operation Allied
Force" in Kosovo in 1999 are structured around this contextualised
constructivist approach developed in the monograph. The studies
reveal how interaction processes can be made accountable, leading
to new vantage points of our understanding of governance problems.
This book will be of interest to scholars interested in global
governance, the work of Hans-Georg Gadamer, Paul Ricoeeur and
hermeneutic philosophy, the UN, humanitarian interventions, and
foreign policy analysts.
The concept of responsibility has emerged as central to the study
of international politics. This book explores the integral role of
responsibility within the context of global crises such as the
responsibility to address climate change, manage financial crises,
and intervene with political conflicts. Vetterlein and
Hansen-Magnusson address responsibility as a conceptual tool in its
own right, existing at the intersection of accountability and
legitimacy and spanning across governance sectors of the
environment, business, and security. This practice-based approach
to the study of responsibility maps similarities and difference
across policy fields and reveals the diverse moral actors
responsible for negotiating responsibility. The emergence of
responsibility further implicates underlying moral values and
policy-making within the context of global politics. The Rise of
Responsibility in World Politics addresses not only individual
agency, but also how questions of community play a role in broader
negotiations around the meaning of responsibility.
|
|