Debating international relations and its relevance to the third world

Abstract


Boniface E.S. Mgonja and Iddi A.M. Makombe

In 1935, Sir Alfred Zimmern described IR not as a single field or discipline, but a “bundle of sub-jects…viewed from a common angle” drawn toward questions of international and global continuity and change. However, since its emergence as a “formal separate discipline” of study IR manifests a very little emphasis from the point of view of the Global South realities. Generally, the study of IR has largely neglected the epistemological position of the Global South, its intellectuals and their roles in the continuity and change in the discipline. This paper draws a postcolonial approach to critique, the Eurocentric nature and character of IR discipline and its exclusive emphasis on what happens or happened in the West. The claim is made on how IR as a discipline privileges the Eurocentric world views as an integral to the ordering and functioning of the discipline

Share this article

Awards Nomination

Select your language of interest to view the total content in your interested language

Indexed In
  • Index Copernicus
  • Google Scholar
  • Open J Gate
  • Genamics JournalSeek
  • CiteFactor
  • OCLC- WorldCat
  • Eurasian Scientific Journal Index
  • Rootindexing
  • Academic Resource Index
  • African e-journals Project
  • Africa Bibliographic Database
  • Center for Research Libraries
  • University of Leiden Catalogue
  • African Journals OnLine (AJOL)
  • African Studies Centre
  • University of Saskatchewan Library
  • University of Toronto Libraries
  • Mirabel Network
  • Michigan State University Library
  • Jstor Library