Agents, structures and international relations : politics as ontology

Author(s)

    • Wight, Colin

Bibliographic Information

Agents, structures and international relations : politics as ontology

Colin Wight

(Cambridge studies in international relations, 101)

Cambridge University Press, 2006

  • : hardback
  • : pbk

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. 300-329) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

The agent-structure problem is a much discussed issue in the field of international relations. In his comprehensive 2006 analysis of this problem, Colin Wight deconstructs the accounts of structure and agency embedded within differing IR theories and, on the basis of this analysis, explores the implications of ontology - the metaphysical study of existence and reality. Wight argues that there are many gaps in IR theory that can only be understood by focusing on the ontological differences that construct the theoretical landscape. By integrating the treatment of the agent-structure problem in IR theory with that in social theory, Wight makes a positive contribution to the problem as an issue of concern to the wider human sciences. At the most fundamental level politics is concerned with competing visions of how the world is and how it should be, thus politics is ontology.

Table of Contents

  • Introduction
  • 1. IR: a science without positivism?
  • 2. The agent-structure problem: from social theory to IR theory
  • 3. The agent-structure problem in IR theory
  • 4. Structure
  • 5. Agency
  • 6. The agent-structure problem: epistemology
  • 7. The agent-structure problem: methodology
  • Conclusion.

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