The Grammar of Status Competition: International Hierarchies and Domestic Politics
Autor Paul David Beaumonten Limba Engleză Hardback – 30 sep 2024
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780197771778
ISBN-10: 0197771777
Pagini: 280
Ilustrații: 2 b/w line drawings; 1 table
Dimensiuni: 155 x 224 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.57 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 0197771777
Pagini: 280
Ilustrații: 2 b/w line drawings; 1 table
Dimensiuni: 155 x 224 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.57 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Recenzii
One of the most original and provocative entries on international status-seeking in years, Beaumont's The Grammar of Status Competition is a must-read for any IR scholar who works on status, recognition, or hierarchy. In fact, all IR scholars and students of the international order should read it.
This book provides an original and elegant answer to why states engage in status competitions when rewards are limited and sometimes even illusionary. The book shifts to understanding the construction of status and why studying it in discourse is crucial, as it plays a role in legitimizing the state on both domestic and international fronts, irrespective of the international recognition of status. This masterful argument has wide-ranging implications for how we study international status, identities, and hierarchies.
In The Grammar of Status Competition, Paul Beaumont persuasively argues that scholars must change the way they study international status competitions, in particular by paying greater attention to the domestic politics of these contests. This theoretically sophisticated, empirically rich, and beautifully written book is required reading for anyone interested in understanding why leaders seem to care so much about something as ephemeral as their country's standing in the world.
This is a path-breaking work for understanding the role of status in international politics. Adopting a critical theoretical approach, the book engages status as a discursive formation central to state legitimation practices. Instead of being something objectively measurable or primarily international in orientation, states are shown to compete
In this groundbreaking book, Paul Beaumont demonstrates that much of what we think about how states pursue international status is, at best, incomplete. Departing from the conventional wisdom that status-seeking requires international recognition by others, Beaumont shows that, in fact, states construct and seek status markers themselves, even if no international actor grants this process much attention. Illustrating this highly innovative argument with very diverse, but empirically rich and rigorously researched case studies of the Boer War, Norway's education system, and international nuclear control talks, Beaumont firmly brings domestic politics into the discussion of international status, greatly enriching this scholarship for years to come.
In this brilliant and provocative book, Paul Beaumont moves the research agenda on states' status-seeking away from international hierarchies and towards domestic politics. Centering the interpretative agency of domestic actors, Beaumont demonstrates that what may appear as 'international' status-seeking may in fact be spatially demarcated and limited to the imagination of domestic governments and other national actors, with little if any relation to international structures or internationally circulating discourses. A must-read for both IR and comparativist scholars with an interest in better understanding the pervasive quest for international status.
This book provides an original and elegant answer to why states engage in status competitions when rewards are limited and sometimes even illusionary. The book shifts to understanding the construction of status and why studying it in discourse is crucial, as it plays a role in legitimizing the state on both domestic and international fronts, irrespective of the international recognition of status. This masterful argument has wide-ranging implications for how we study international status, identities, and hierarchies.
In The Grammar of Status Competition, Paul Beaumont persuasively argues that scholars must change the way they study international status competitions, in particular by paying greater attention to the domestic politics of these contests. This theoretically sophisticated, empirically rich, and beautifully written book is required reading for anyone interested in understanding why leaders seem to care so much about something as ephemeral as their country's standing in the world.
This is a path-breaking work for understanding the role of status in international politics. Adopting a critical theoretical approach, the book engages status as a discursive formation central to state legitimation practices. Instead of being something objectively measurable or primarily international in orientation, states are shown to compete
In this groundbreaking book, Paul Beaumont demonstrates that much of what we think about how states pursue international status is, at best, incomplete. Departing from the conventional wisdom that status-seeking requires international recognition by others, Beaumont shows that, in fact, states construct and seek status markers themselves, even if no international actor grants this process much attention. Illustrating this highly innovative argument with very diverse, but empirically rich and rigorously researched case studies of the Boer War, Norway's education system, and international nuclear control talks, Beaumont firmly brings domestic politics into the discussion of international status, greatly enriching this scholarship for years to come.
In this brilliant and provocative book, Paul Beaumont moves the research agenda on states' status-seeking away from international hierarchies and towards domestic politics. Centering the interpretative agency of domestic actors, Beaumont demonstrates that what may appear as 'international' status-seeking may in fact be spatially demarcated and limited to the imagination of domestic governments and other national actors, with little if any relation to international structures or internationally circulating discourses. A must-read for both IR and comparativist scholars with an interest in better understanding the pervasive quest for international status.
Notă biografică
Paul David Beaumont is a Senior Researcher at the Norwegian Institute of International Affairs (NUPI), working in the Global Order and Diplomacy research group. He holds a PhD in International Environmental Studies and Development and a MSc in IR from the Norwegian University of Life Sciences. His research interests include IR theory, hierarchies in world politics, the (dis)functioning of international institutions, global environmental politics, nuclear weapons and disarmament, and interpretivist research-methods. Paul's research investigating the influence of international hierarchies has featured in numerous leading IR journals including European Journal of International Relations, International Studies Review, Third World Quarterly, and International Relations, among others.