book chapterAug 16, 2019Closed access

Social Forces, States, and World Orders: Beyond International Relations Theory

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Abstract

Academic conventions divide up the seamless web of the real social world into separate spheres, each with its own theorising; this is a necessary and practical way of gaining understanding. Subdivisions of social knowledge thus may roughly correspond to the ways in which human affairs are organised in particular times and places. E. H. Carr and Eric Hobsbawm have both been sensitive to the continuities between social forces, the changing nature of the state and global relationships. Critical theory is directed to the social and political complex as a whole rather than to the separate parts. Critical theory allows for a normative choice in favour of a social and political order different from the prevailing…

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Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Political science
  • International relations
  • International relations theory
  • Political economy
  • Sociology
  • Law and economics
  • Law
  • Politics
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