Description

Book Synopsis
This book brings together the key scholars in the international practice debate to demonstrate its strengths as an innovative research perspective. The contributions show the benefit of practice theories in the study of phenomena in international security, international political economy and international organisation, by directing attention to concrete and observable everyday practices that shape international outcomes. The chapters exemplify the cross-overs and relations to other theoretical approaches, and thereby establish practice theories as a distinct IR perspective. Each chapter investigates a key concept that plays an important role in international relations theory, such as power, norms, knowledge, change or cognition. Taken together, the authors make a strong case that practice theories allow to ask new questions, direct attention to uncommon empirical material, and reach different conclusions about international relations phenomena. The book is a must read for anyone intere

Trade Review
This marvelous collection well charts the variety of practice theories drawn on in contemporary international relations research, thereby revealing what makes practice theory coherent as a distinct general approach in the field. Insightfully exploring new understandings that theories of practices provide of familiar IR concepts such as knowledge, norms, power, and change, the book also examines new concepts such as repetition and visibility that they offer to the field. Of undoubtedly great value to IR scholars, the volume is also recommended to scholars outside the field who are interested in the concepts that it explores. Ted Schatzki, Professor of Geography, Philosophy, and Sociology, University of Kentucky
A first-rate volume on the present and future directions of the study of practices by many of its most important exponents. Michael Barnett, Professor of International Relations, George Washington University

Table of Contents
List of figures; List of tables; List of contributors; Acknowledgements; Part I. Introduction: Conversations and the Evolution of Practice Theorizing: 1. Conceptualizing international practices: establishing a research agenda in conversations Alena Drieschova and Christian Bueger; 2. Critiques of the practice turn in IR theory: some responses Ted Hopf; Part II. Key Concepts of IR Scholarship: 3. Epistemic communities of practice Emanuel Adler and Michael Faubert; 4. Practices and norms: relationships, disjunctures and change Steven Bernstein and Marion Laurence; 5. The Normativity of international practices Frank Gadinger; 6. Resistance as practice: counter-conduct after foucault William Walters; 7. For a practice approach to authority: the case of the emergence of central bankers' international authority Joelle Dumouchel; 8. Evolution in international practices Vincent Pouliot; Part III. Innovative Concepts: 9. The dynamics of repetition: translocal practice and transnational negotiations Hilmar Schäfe; 10. Visibility: practices of seeing and overlooking Jonathan Luke Austin with Anna Leander; Part III. Conclusion: The Future of Practice Theorizing: 11. Practices and a 'theory' of action? some conceptual issues concerning 'ends', 'reasons' and 'happiness' Friedrich Kratochwil; 12. Conclusion: The semiotic web of international practice theorizing Alena Drieschova and Christian Bueger; References; Index.

Conceptualizing International Practices

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    A Hardback by Alena Drieschova, Christian Bueger, Ted Hopf

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      View other formats and editions of Conceptualizing International Practices by Alena Drieschova

      Publisher: Cambridge University Press
      Publication Date: 1/23/2022 12:06:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9781316511398, 978-1316511398
      ISBN10: 1316511391

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      This book brings together the key scholars in the international practice debate to demonstrate its strengths as an innovative research perspective. The contributions show the benefit of practice theories in the study of phenomena in international security, international political economy and international organisation, by directing attention to concrete and observable everyday practices that shape international outcomes. The chapters exemplify the cross-overs and relations to other theoretical approaches, and thereby establish practice theories as a distinct IR perspective. Each chapter investigates a key concept that plays an important role in international relations theory, such as power, norms, knowledge, change or cognition. Taken together, the authors make a strong case that practice theories allow to ask new questions, direct attention to uncommon empirical material, and reach different conclusions about international relations phenomena. The book is a must read for anyone intere

      Trade Review
      This marvelous collection well charts the variety of practice theories drawn on in contemporary international relations research, thereby revealing what makes practice theory coherent as a distinct general approach in the field. Insightfully exploring new understandings that theories of practices provide of familiar IR concepts such as knowledge, norms, power, and change, the book also examines new concepts such as repetition and visibility that they offer to the field. Of undoubtedly great value to IR scholars, the volume is also recommended to scholars outside the field who are interested in the concepts that it explores. Ted Schatzki, Professor of Geography, Philosophy, and Sociology, University of Kentucky
      A first-rate volume on the present and future directions of the study of practices by many of its most important exponents. Michael Barnett, Professor of International Relations, George Washington University

      Table of Contents
      List of figures; List of tables; List of contributors; Acknowledgements; Part I. Introduction: Conversations and the Evolution of Practice Theorizing: 1. Conceptualizing international practices: establishing a research agenda in conversations Alena Drieschova and Christian Bueger; 2. Critiques of the practice turn in IR theory: some responses Ted Hopf; Part II. Key Concepts of IR Scholarship: 3. Epistemic communities of practice Emanuel Adler and Michael Faubert; 4. Practices and norms: relationships, disjunctures and change Steven Bernstein and Marion Laurence; 5. The Normativity of international practices Frank Gadinger; 6. Resistance as practice: counter-conduct after foucault William Walters; 7. For a practice approach to authority: the case of the emergence of central bankers' international authority Joelle Dumouchel; 8. Evolution in international practices Vincent Pouliot; Part III. Innovative Concepts: 9. The dynamics of repetition: translocal practice and transnational negotiations Hilmar Schäfe; 10. Visibility: practices of seeing and overlooking Jonathan Luke Austin with Anna Leander; Part III. Conclusion: The Future of Practice Theorizing: 11. Practices and a 'theory' of action? some conceptual issues concerning 'ends', 'reasons' and 'happiness' Friedrich Kratochwil; 12. Conclusion: The semiotic web of international practice theorizing Alena Drieschova and Christian Bueger; References; Index.

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