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How (not) to advance Global IR: a rejoinder

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  31 July 2025

Yong-Soo Eun
Affiliation:
Department of Political Science and International Studies, https://ror.org/046865y68 Hanyang University , Seoul, South Korea
Peter Marcus Kristensen*
Affiliation:
Department of Political Science, https://ror.org/035b05819 University of Copenhagen , Copenhagen, Denmark
Deepshikha Shahi
Affiliation:
Department of Political Science, https://ror.org/03zdwsf69 University of Rostock , Rostock, Germany
*
Corresponding author: Peter Marcus Kristensen; Email: pmk@ifs.ku.dk
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Abstract

In this rejoinder, we engage with the recent International Theory symposium on Global IR, situating it within the broader literature and outlining intellectual pathways for advancing Global IR’s agenda. We explore how the main critiques identified by the symposium – namely, essentialism, geo-epistemologies, disciplinary reformism, and ahistoricism – have been and can be further addressed through recent developments in Global IR. This rejoinder is not an attempt to prioritise one version of Global IR over another; rather, it emphasises that Global IR comes in multiple versions, and these versions should continue to be a collective work in progress. Our engagement with the evolving debates in Global IR seeks to fulfil the promise of a more global and diverse discipline.

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A symposium published in International Theory in November 2023 provides a number of critiques and correctives with the objective of advancing the Global IR agenda and increasing its ‘impact and durability.’Footnote 1 A useful roadmap requires up-to-date coverage of the fast-evolving and expanding landscape on which Global IR unfolds. The symposium unfortunately falls short of meeting this prerequisite. It does not pay sufficient attention to Global IR’s recent theoretical developments and analytical suggestions, and often reduces its agenda to selective contributions, thereby ending up offering a limited view of the same. Specifically, it tends to reduce Global IR to Amitav Acharya’s Global IR and relies heavily on examples from Chinese IR scholarship to substantiate its claims. This narrowness obscures the symposium’s broader potential for advancing the Global IR agenda. It ends up offering an overly restrictive pathway for advancing Global IR, which may inadvertently constrain the diversity of perspectives that Global IR aims to embrace.

The movement towards a more global and diverse IR encompasses a multitude of interventions that aim to address IR’s historical ‘Western-centric’ biases, decentre and open up the discipline, and incorporate a wider array of epistemic authorities from beyond the ‘West.’ Genealogically, the ‘Global IR’ agenda can be traced to multiple origins. One originates from ‘postcolonial’ critiques of the Eurocentric underpinnings of international theory.Footnote 2 Another originates from a growing interest in ‘Third World’ perspectives and experiences of IR.Footnote 3 A third originates from a sociology of knowledge interest in the comparative socio-institutional underpinnings of IR, first in the United States and Europe, later expanded to IR ‘around the world.’Footnote 4 A fourth strand arose from an interest in ‘non-Western’ IR theory and the exploration of how to theorise world politics from ‘non-Western’ experiences and perspectives.Footnote 5 A fifth strand, dubbed ‘post-Western’ IR, sought to transform the discipline itself rather than simply discovering or fashioning ‘non-Western’ theories.Footnote 6

Amitav Acharya, as President of the International Studies Association, coined the term ‘Global IR’ to encapsulate these diverse interventions.Footnote 7 The Global IR agenda has since generated a substantial body of scholarship. A growing number of scholars recognise the need to pluralise IR, and do so under the label ‘Global IR.’ However, even among those committed to or sympathetic with the project, there is a wide variety of perspectives and approaches, all with the shared aim of advancing Global IR.Footnote 8 The International Theory symposium inserts itself into this line of inquiry and questioning.

In this rejoinder, we discuss the symposium’s critiques in view of the broader Global IR literature and chart intellectual pathways for advancing the agenda. We discuss how the main critiques identified by the symposium – namely, ‘essentialism,’ ‘geo-epistemologies,’ ‘disciplinary reformism,’ and ‘ahistoricism’ – have been and can be further addressed through recent developments in Global IR. This rejoinder is not an attempt to prioritise one version of Global IR over another. Global IR is not a particular theory tied to a particular theorist. Acharya may have coined the term, but his writings do not exclusively represent or exhaust the body of work that has grown under the intellectual ambit of Global IR. Global IR is better viewed as a ‘conversation’Footnote 9 among both well-established and underexplored knowledge traditions, resulting in breaking new theoretical and practical ground for doing IR. We engage with the evolving Global IR debates with the objective of redeeming the promise of a more global and diverse discipline, an ambition the symposium authors also support.

The study of ‘differences’ in Global IR: beyond essentialism

The main charge in the symposium revolves around the so-called ‘essentialism trap,’ which refers to a commitment to ‘the notion that the world is constituted by pre-formed, fixed, internally coherent, and bounded social forms; [this] trap involves the overuse of essentialist categories by radical projects, a process that can result in the reinforcement of status quo categories and assumptions.’Footnote 10 A central manifestation of essentialism is Global IR’s binarisation of differences between the ‘Western’ and ‘non-Western’ worlds or ‘global South and global North.’ Global IR, on that view, is premised on a starting assumption that rigidifies irreconcilable differences between Western and non-Western worlds defined by mutually exclusive social categories such as ‘cultures, nations, regions, and civilisations’ – thus propagating an ‘ethos of separation’Footnote 11 and a penchant for ‘exotifying differences between the West and the East.’Footnote 12

Warnings about the risks of essentialism, particularism, nativism, and parochialism – levelled against Global IR and its predecessors for decades – should be taken seriously. We can only agree that Global IR should avoid the ‘gravitational pull presented by the essentialism trap.’Footnote 13 But we do not agree that the entire body of Global IR literature remains ‘rooted in essentialist, substantialist, internalist commitments.’Footnote 14 ‘Global IR’ is a broad tent. We do not intend to defend everything that goes under the label. Some studies are susceptible to the critique of essentialism understood as nativism and ethnocentrism premised on irreconcilable national or civilisational differences. Elements of this were traced in works related to Latin American IR,Footnote 15 Russian IR,Footnote 16 and Chinese IR.Footnote 17 The early works of Qin, Yan, and ZhaoFootnote 18 are frequently cited by critics concerned with the essentialism of Chinese IR. It is not difficult to detect an essentialist undercurrent in these Chinese efforts at IR theorisation that dichotomise complex thought systems into contrasting camps of rationalist versus relational thinking, hegemonic versus moral leadership, or Westphalian dualism versus Tianxia monism, and then assigns the former to Western (e.g., modern European) culture and the latter to Chinese culture.

However, several recent interventions by Chinese IR scholars proceed with more reflexivity about the essentialist trap and offer alternatives to essentialist or nationalist approaches in constructing a ‘Chinese School’ or defining ‘Chineseness.’Footnote 19 For example, several scholars of the Shanghai IR community have developed a symbiosis theory (gongsheng) and positioned it within the debate on ‘Chinese IR.’Footnote 20 This theory proclaims that the ‘pluralist coexistence’ among actors with ‘different roles and functions’ in social systems, including the international system, represents the ‘ideal state of nature.’Footnote 21 In this theory, there is no such thing as a fixed function or essential property such as ‘Chineseness,’ but rather yizhi (heterogeneous) symbiosis that functions as the organising principle of the international system. Going a step further, Chih-yu Shih has criticised Chinese IR for its ‘self-centrism,’ being committed to only one (i.e., Chinese cultural) way of forming relationality, and proposed opening up Chinese relationality by ‘understanding the self from the perspective of a different relationality.’Footnote 22 This approach, he argues, enables Chinese IR to embrace other ways of being relational, thereby facilitating ‘self-transformation’ beyond an essentialised Chinese IR. These developments notwithstanding, it is probably inevitable that some theorists will wish to present theirs as the Chinese theory – and may do so in an essentialist contradistinction to Western theories. But this does not imply that such a wager is accepted and becomes hegemonic. Of all developments in Global IR, the Chinese School has gained the most attention in mainstream IR, and thus understandably features prominently in the symposium’s critique of Global IR. But in the broader picture, it is an outlier.

If we lift our gaze, there is much more resistance towards this kind of essentialism in other contexts. For instance, there has been sustained opposition to the idea of forming an Indian IR school, juxtaposed to ‘Western’ IR, based on exactly the dangers of succumbing to ‘essentialist’ and ‘nativist’ notions of Indianness, and because of the instability, permeability, and complicated history of ‘Indianness.’Footnote 23 Indian IR scholars have emphasised the need to ‘avoid a monolithic conception of IR that emerges from India.’Footnote 24 Likewise, it is difficult to view the ‘Kyoto School’ as the Japanese school.Footnote 25 In fact, there has been a cacophony of voices surrounding the debate over what Japanese IR is, or what it should be,Footnote 26 with some arguing that ‘there is no such thing as Japanese IR theory … there is a variety of ways of thinking relations between the self and the other, the West and the East, peace and war, the region and the state, private and public, the egg and the wall, local and global.’Footnote 27 Similarly, Korean IR scholars have argued that, if a ‘Korean IR school’ exists, it should be characterised by ‘hybrid’ or ‘twisted’ (post)coloniality,Footnote 28 given that European modernity has been reappropriated through Korea’s postcolonial experiences in the politics of IR knowledge-making. If we look beyond Asia, for example, to Latin America, Eastern Europe, or Central Asia, Global IR efforts are less premised on essentialised civilisational and cultural differences and more often positioned as hybrid or in-between ‘West’ and ‘non-West’ (or rather ‘South’).Footnote 29 These works demonstrate that Global IR has evolved with a growing awareness of the ‘essentialist trap’ and by increasingly embracing non-essentialist positions.

Turning to the problematisation of the West/non-West binary, this, too, has a long history in the Global IR debate.Footnote 30 Although early studies on Global IR, particularly those focused on ‘non-Western’ IR theorisation, use the West/non-West binary as an entry point for making their cases, few contemporary Global IR scholars treat terms like ‘West and non-West’ or ‘global North and global South’ as substantial entities that exist independently of each other.Footnote 31 Moreover, there is an emerging literature on ‘dialogue beyond the West-non-West distinction’ in the Global IR discussion. Shahi, for example, has explicated the complexities of a dialogic approach to Global IR.Footnote 32 Ersoy has devised the mechanisms to dismantle epistemic hierarchies and asymmetrical dialogues through Global IR.Footnote 33 Echoing this move towards dialogue, Chu has underlined the need to rethink interlocutors in Global IR and the utility of an ‘embedded observer approach,’ the approach that grants the observer not only thick descriptive knowledge but also possibly transformative experience as s/he approximates the perspectives of differently situated Western and non-Western actors with an objective to release their common emancipatory potential in IR and beyond.Footnote 34 Even Acharya, the symposium’s primary target for criticism, writes, ‘Global IR accepts neither the “West” nor the “Rest” (or “Global South” or “Third World”) as enduring categories, but focuses on their mutual engagement and reconstruction.’Footnote 35 Elsewhere, Acharya and Buzan also acknowledge that the terms ‘West’ and ‘non-West’ have lost any analytical significance and exist only as (uneasy) terms of convenience.Footnote 36

The distinction between ‘non-Western’ and ‘post-Western’ strands is important here, as the latter has been devoted to a rejection of the ‘ethos of separation.’ Advocates of ‘post-Western IR’ would reject ‘non-Western’ IR either because it remains caught in a binary negation (ignoring hybridities) or because it reinforces dualist epistemologies (rigidifying the ethos of separation despite accepting hybridities) and continues to view ‘the world from a particular perspective centred by Western epistemology, [thereby] projecting the world as imagined by the Western eye.’Footnote 37 Advocates of ‘Post-Western IR’ have specifically rejected dualist ontologies and epistemologies that reinforce divisive self-other interactions between various mutually separated binary groupings: for example, West/non-West, core/periphery, global North/global South, haves/have-nots, hyper-masculine-self/hyper-feminine-other, elites/masses, colonial/post-colonial, and oriental/occidental. In contrast, the ‘non-Western’ strand imitates these same dualisms, but reverses them in performing surveys wherein the non-West is established as the ‘self’ and the West is installed as the ‘other.’Footnote 38

Global IR studies in the post-Western strand, attentive to the risks of essentialism and the West/non-West binary, have proposed redefining the notions of time and space to eliminate the divide between multiple phenomenal and noumenal worlds. The Tianxia theory refers to the cosmic movements that unfold in time-space between heaven and earth: the abstract forms of bi (round heaven) and cong (square earth) are deployed as ideational tools to instil links between the human and supra-human worlds or phenomenal and noumenal worldsFootnote 39; from this standpoint, the ‘conceptual Tianxia system of all-under-heaven should envision an all-inclusive world of no outside with great harmony of all peoples or compatibility of all civilizations…[contrary to the prevailing apprehensions, one is] not sure if China could be considered as a Tianxia paradigm.’Footnote 40 The Advaita theory defines the time–space matrices as necessary means to grasp the fleeting realities of the phenomenal world, but whatever is known or unknown in the phenomenal world is assumed as a fragmented reflection of an all-pervasive noumenal world; in so doing, this theory pre-instals the objectified universal reality of ‘time-space indivisibility’ to deal with the issues of irreconcilability related to divergent subjectified annals of geo-historical realities.Footnote 41 Theorisations inspired by Nishida Kitaro’s spatial-temporal notions of ‘nothingness’ and ‘eternal present’ consider the noumena as the unifying power of reality and the phenomena as the state of conflict in reality’s progress through differentiation.Footnote 42

These Global IR studies – which problematise dualism – revive the timeless phenomenal-noumenal expanse of human consciousness, thereby restoring an invisible yet inescapable connectedness between multiple de-territorialised selves and others who would otherwise subsist in a territorialised world. This, in turn, supports the vision of ‘pluralistic universalism,’ a vision that allows plural ontologies from diverse Western and non-Western worlds to continually emerge, contradict, complement, co-adjust, and coexist through non-binary and, thus, non-essentialist, ever-evolving relations. As such, the vision of pluralistic universalism does not logically or emotionally subscribe to the ethos of separation. Global IR studies based on this vision of pluralistic universalism neither project ‘the national’ as a predominant conceptual category nor treat ‘the national’ and ‘the international’ as discordant domains. So, it is unfair to label the entire body of Global IR literature as essentialist or nativist. Realising the solidarity of life in the national and international domains, these Global IR studies do not naturalise the state as the main unit of analysis; rather, they argue that the progress in the national domain demands progress in the international domain and vice versa.Footnote 43 To harmonise the physical, psychological, and institutional aspects of worldly existence, these Global IR interventions introduce the principle of ‘world-ness’ that transcends the norms of (inter)nationality: the principle of world-ness instructs us to analyse affairs of the world by a ‘world standard,’ not a ‘national standard.’Footnote 44 In fact, these Global IR studies agree that there exists a variety of ways of thinking about the self-other, national-international, or West-non-West relations. These ways of thinking become political only when interpreted in a specific space-time intersection.Footnote 45 It is the analytical fixity to a specific space-time intersection that leads to ‘singularity,’ ‘nativism,’ or ‘essentialism.’ Exceeding this understanding of singularity, nativism, or essentialism, these Global IR studies prefer to enquire how IR discourses cause suffering by victimising peoples for the sake of the temporally and spatially fixed ideals of national sovereignty or world order that are nothing more than ontologically passing ‘temporal visions’ or ‘subjective snapshots.’Footnote 46

As seen above, many Global IR undertakings have risen above the limitations of ethnicism and nationalism to form what is arguably a genuinely Lakatosian research program.Footnote 47 Furthermore, by evoking a non-dual epistemological approach, Tianxia-, Advaita-, and Buddhism-inspired Global IR studies look for solutions to protracted border disputes and ecological disasters. The Sufi methods formulate spiritual tactics for conflict transformation,Footnote 48 while the Amazonian rituals suggest schemes to counter colonising attitudes.Footnote 49 A growing body of Global IR literature demonstrates the feasibility of innovative policy experimentations that remain informed by an array of Indigenous concepts: for example, dharma as it directs the ‘righteous policy actions’ of the diplomats,Footnote 50 aikido as it guides the practitioners in responding to the attacks while emphatically ‘caring for the attackers,’Footnote 51 ubuntu as it motivates a ‘humanist soft power project,’Footnote 52 and runa as it ‘unites the human and non-human constituents’ to inculcate empathetic praxeological capacities,Footnote 53 among others. These kinds of policy experimentations can be considered as exemplifications of the alternative ontological proposals of Global IR’s pluralistic universalism.

The crucial point is this: the act of discussing ‘differences’ between Western and non-Western worlds does not necessarily essentialise and binarise differences; these ‘differences’ can be explored and presented not as fixed characteristics or properties that are endogenously generated and geographically bounded, but as transient assemblages that are actualised in specific contexts of time and space. A fundamental problem embedded deep in IR is that these assemblages, which manifested in various human societies long before ‘the rise of Europe’ in the eighteenth century, remain neglected in the discipline’s core narratives. As many critics, including the symposium’s authors, point out, the discipline’s long-standing practice of universalising understandings of how the world works in contemporary, Euro-Atlantic terms continues to prevail. Global IR’s analytical focus on the non-Western world is (and should be, we argue) rooted in a reflexive move to address and rectify this epistemic parochialism. From this standpoint, it is possible to maintain a non-essentialist ontological orientation while still exploring the ‘differences’ (i.e., different manifested assemblages) between Western and non-Western worlds. Ultimately, the symposium authors seem to conflate two aspects of difference – essential differences that remain fixed at the ontological level, and representational differences that can be identified at the epistemic level – in their critique of Global IR’s commitment to essentialism and an ethos of separation.Footnote 54

The geo-epistemologies of Global IR: surpassing ‘geo-fixities’

The symposium argues that Global IR suffers from the problem of ‘geo-epistemology,’ a trait whereby ‘theories of world politics are commonly categorised by geographic referents, [e.g., the calls for] national, regional, and civilisational schools of IR.’Footnote 55 The embrace of geo-epistemologies, which in their view risks subordinating reason to cultural or geographical fixities, reduces IR scholars to the representatives of their geographical contexts. One article argues that the geo-epistemological commitment – and the resulting focus on IR in different places – is a distortion of Stanley Hoffmann’s argument about IR as an ‘American Social Science.’ Allegedly, this distortion resulted from Ole Wæver’s comparative sociologisation of the U.S.–European differences that became further consolidated through its later third-hand receptions and applications in ‘other nations.’Footnote 56 It was Wæver, and the subsequent applications of Wæver’s work, not Hoffmann, the symposium contends, that introduced assumptions about the influence of regions and national academies on knowledge production.Footnote 57

This genealogy of Global IR is important, but the argument itself hardly holds. If anything, it can even be argued that Global IR has gone too far in Hoffmann’s footsteps. It was Hoffmann who stated that ‘scholars do not like to think of their intellectual dependence on the status of their country’ as ‘it disturbs their sense of belonging to a cosmopolitan, free-floating community of science.’Footnote 58 Hoffmann provided a historical analysis of American IR vis-à-vis its institutions and relations to power. Many of the adaptations of Hoffmann or Wæver to various non-Western contexts do exactly that. The main ‘political circumstance’ for the emergence of IR as an ‘American Social Science,’ according to Hoffmann, was the United States’ rise to global power. Though the symposium authors rightly point out that Hoffmann called for a more historical IR that could also understand the ‘weaker and revolutionary’ sites, his own analytical focus was exactly on the emergence of the United States and American Social Science. Likewise, much of the attention in Global IR has been on contributions from contemporary rising great powers, which partly explains the enormous attention to the Chinese School, at the expense of the under-exploration of many weaker but revolutionary sites of knowledge production.

The symposium authors further warn against naturalising the state as the main unit of analysis for Global IR. Many studies of ‘IR around the world’ have indeed focused on IR within a nationally bounded academia. But the objective of Global IR is not to reduce scholars to representatives of their national political contexts; nor to say that national or geographical positionality are the only conditioning factors for their theorising. The symposium, if read generously, can be understood as a warning against a flattened conception of geocultural context (simply nationality or geography), which, when coupled with unhelpful meta-cartographies such as ‘South’ or ‘non-West,’ too easily falls into the essentialist trap. This is a valid concern that aligns well with the more sociologically inclined strands of Global IR. These interventions go to greater lengths to avoid explanations that rely on such ‘externalist reductionism’ and instead try to nuance our conception of context to include academic, disciplinary, institutional, material, embodied, spatial, and temporal context.Footnote 59 Another useful way to challenge flattened conceptions of context, much in line with the relational pathway in the Global IR literature and also proposed in the symposium, is recent attempts to de-territorialise context and interrogate how hybrid subjectivities influence international thought, for example, through autoethnographic accounts.Footnote 60 Global IR has thrived, and will continue to thrive, without simplistic meta-geographies such as West/non-West, North/South, core/periphery, and coloniser/colonised.Footnote 61 However, one should also be aware that the de-territorialising pathway, which stresses the idiosyncrasies of academic trajectories and the multitude of exposures and amalgamations, also comes at the cost of potentially fragmenting the Global IR conversation.

A less radical way of challenging territorialised conceptions of context is to place even greater emphasis on the divergences in the IR discourses operating ‘within’ a state. By now, most studies of the Chinese School underscore precisely that their divergences are more interesting than their Chineseness.Footnote 62 These studies explore how there is no singular ‘Chinese School,’ but that IR discourses in China have gradually diversified through the competition among Qin Yaqing’s relational/guanxi approach, Yan Xuetong’s Tsinghua School of moral realism, Zhao Tingyang Tianxia system, and increasingly also include Tang Shiping’s evolutionary theory and Ren Xiao’s symbiotic theory in this structured rivalry. The diversity within the Chinese School debate, of course, does not preclude that they could all be essentialising Chineseness and starkly contrasting it to ‘Western’ IR, albeit in different ways. It does, however, debunk the notion that geocultural context is somehow deterministic and homogenising. An approach that brings out the heteroglossia of seemingly ‘national IRs’ would be useful when studying IR in other contexts, so as to avoid binary West/non-West comparative frameworks. It is also worth pointing out that even Global IR scholars who delimit their analytical scope to a specific local, national, or regional context are often well aware of its global entanglements and internal heterogeneity. To continue with the China example, not all Global IR studies of China analyse ‘Chinese IR’ as a reified or self-contained unit; several, in fact, position this assemblage of approaches within the historical-institutional linkages to IR elsewhere.Footnote 63

The symposium authors warn against the risk that the reliance on geo-epistemologies might lead IR down a fragmented, parochial, and ethnocentric road where ‘only Chinese scholars can teach and research about China.’Footnote 64 But this borders on strawman logic. This alleged ‘risk’ reads more like a reflection of identity politics playing out on the campuses where the symposium authors are based (geo-epistemology in action?). Most Global IR scholars would probably view such restrictive culturalism as a highly unproductive and dangerous path, one that would deglobalise IR rather than the opposite. It also misreads the Chinese schools. More generous readings by other prominent ‘Western’ theorists suggest that the Chinese schools, though sometimes presented in stark contradistinction to Western thought, be read as invitations drawing on Chinese cosmologies, not vain attempts to essentialise Chinese culture.Footnote 65 Though it is sometimes presented in essentialist ways, the Chinese school is fused with ‘Western’ IR theories and fundamentally premised on a search to gain international recognition and interlocutors, not to make the study of China the prerogative of Chinese nationals.Footnote 66

The question of situatedness remains, however: Can we not reject the ethnocentrism of a ‘Chinese school for the Chinese to research China’ yet still acknowledge the difference between studying China in a Chinese, Vietnamese, or U.S. sociopolitical context? The point is not authenticity or a quest to arrive at some mystical culturally transferred insight, but that loci of enunciation matter. To fully discard ‘know-where’Footnote 67 and to turn a blind eye to the reality that knowledge is produced somewhere would be an over-correction with equally conservative effects. The project of globalising IR can only be enacted through particular contexts, and what ‘globalising,’ ‘pluralising,’ or ‘decolonising’ means also depends on whether you are situated on the East Coast of Africa or North America.Footnote 68 Advancing Global IR requires more, not less, reflexivity about the context of our knowledge production, including problematisations of how those contexts have been worlded in the first place, and their often hybridised character.Footnote 69

As ‘geographies of knowledge’ is one of the main contentions of the symposium, it is worth noting that this critique itself is not coming from nowhere. The symposium is written from the standpoint of critical scholars trying to correct Global IR and suggesting better ways to challenge the ‘IR citadel’ rather than only giving ‘workers’ visas’ to Global IR,Footnote 70 or, by ensuring ‘affirmative action’ leading to an equal representation of nations, turning Global IR into a ‘United Nations of IR.’Footnote 71 But, then again, this is the citadel itself speaking. A critique of Global IR coming from the citadel should be taken seriously, but, when expressed as a critique of the citadel itself, also critically. If geo-epistemologies do not matter, the citadel can be left intact: IR can comfortably continue to be regulated from the east coast of the United States and the greater London area – if done with the ‘proper’ tools from relational global history. This is hardly the way to advance Global IR.

The symposium also highlights an additional problem of ‘geo-fixities’; namely, that Global IR ‘encourages diffusionist ideas of the spread of knowledge from an origin [the West] to a destination [the non-West], and essentialist representation of specific geographies of knowledge.’Footnote 72 As a counterpoint to these ‘geo-fixities,’ one symposium paper contends that ‘in a sense’ IR was already ‘global at birth.’Footnote 73 It illustrates this by pointing to how South Asian scholars already in the early twentieth century published in mainstream Western journals, were present in foreign universities, and had created associations, journals, and think tanks such as the Indian Political Science Association in 1938, the Indian Journal of Political Science in 1939, and the Indian Council of World Affairs in 1943. Global IR, the argument goes, is therefore spreading an ahistorical conjecture that IR is an ‘American social science that is only now beginning to globalise,’ a conjecture that nurtures the above-mentioned problems concerning ‘essentialist narratives of national “schools”’ and global mapping exercises that stimulate ‘orientalist tropes of epistemic difference.’ It is useful to show that the history of IR in, say, India is more complicated than a diffusionist West-to-Rest account suggests, that knowledge does not travel in a linear fashion, and that ‘Indian IR’ was not a complete void before the arrival of ‘Western IR.’ But we do not agree that this makes IR ‘global,’ except ‘in a [very narrow] sense.’ Using the institutionalisation of South Asian IR and its scholars’ presence in ‘Western’ journals as an indicator of IR’s ‘globality’ constitutes a performative contradiction. As the symposium authors continuously emphasise, a truly Global IR is exactly not just about the inclusion of ‘non-Western’ IR scholars in Western journals and institutions or about launching institutions, associations, and journals for the study of IR in ‘non-Western’ parts of the globe. This brings us to the third contention with Global IR.

The ‘normative commitments’ of Global IR: moving past disciplinary reformism

A concurrent theme in the debates on Global IR concerns its normative commitments. These normative commitments are attacked on two grounds: first, for their reformist stance vis-à-vis mainstream IR, and second, for their additive attitude towards the ideas operating outside mainstream IR. The symposium authors criticise Global IR, particularly Acharya’s version, for working with ‘existing approaches’ and operating ‘within existing ecologies’ rather than seeking to ‘replace’ them. Since Acharya’s version of Global IR does not aim to replace existing approaches, they argue that this attitude leads to a ‘disciplinary compromise.’ This interpretation is not entirely incorrect. Acharya’s version of Global IR does not seek to replace existing approaches but to add/include several previously ignored non-Western voices with the aim to ‘diversify’ existing approaches so that the mainstream theories are not left ‘as is.’Footnote 74

Take the example of realism. Some realist contributions to ‘Global IR’ are more about ‘globalising realism’ and making it more universal, for example, by including ‘non-Western’ applications and canonical texts.Footnote 75 However, such interventions do not necessarily leave Western-centric realism as is. The Chinese moral realism asserted that ‘the popularity of an action defines the morality of the action, irrespective of whether the cause of the popularity is because of political values or secular interest’Footnote 76; the Indian ‘Kautilyan realism’ defined the religiopolitical trait of ‘moral-energetic action’ as ‘psychological power’, thereby undermining the ‘power versus morality’ debates that often cause a disquiet in Eurocentric IRFootnote 77; also, the Japanese pacifist realists portrayed ‘pacifism not as an alternative to realism, but rather as its logical conclusion.’Footnote 78 As these non-Western voices reform the mainstream theories, they disrupt the taken-for-granted mindset that the ability to theorise IR is the sole prerogative of the West.

The Global IR agenda must do more than disrupt and reinterpret cognate concepts and theories, however. It is also about pursuing post-Western pathways that exceed the ‘derivative discourses’ of Western IR and ‘exceptionalist discourses’ that remain applicable to limited native time-space zones (e.g., exceptionalist discourses that deepen the ethos of separation). Global IR must also build alternative frames of ‘globality’ and forge novel intellectual connections and dialogue. To do so, the ‘Global IR research programme’ suggests two methodological routes:Footnote 79 first, taking cognisance of ‘covariance,’ which presupposes that genetically similar ideas/practices can emerge at temporally and spatially distant places – so, IR scholars located at any geographical site can analyse and apply the travelling ideas/practices that are provincially neither Western nor non-Western; and second, showing readiness for ‘recontextualisation,’ which implies that the idea/practice that originates at one place can be integrated, adapted, and reused at another place, thereby inviting IR scholars to use their own thoughts/values/beliefs while engineering their inventive plans for enriching Global IR.

The symposium authors raise an important point by stressing that globalising IR implies more than simply adding more voices and stirring. Global IR is not just about increased insertion of input from Chinese, Indian, Japanese, African, or Middle Eastern voices clubbed together under the rubric ‘non-Western IR,’ the term initially used by Acharya. This is reminiscent of the critique advanced by ‘post-Western’ IR scholars. We must at the very least critically interrogate the relations among ‘existing approaches’ and what is ‘added.’ More importantly, Global IR works with existing approaches as a means to attain a greater diversity, not as an end in itself; Barnett and Zarakol may be conflating the two. As discussed by Eun,Footnote 80 a greater diversity does not always arise from conversations among the like-minded, for example, the critics of mainstream IR. The conversations among the like-minded may lead to disciplinary segregation without ‘mutual learning.’ Without speaking a recognisable language, this disciplinary segregation may create a situation where critical voices that aim to dismantle the citadel are at best tolerated at the margins, while the citadel goes on with business as usual. Global IR therefore calls for mutual learning through modes of ‘interlocution’ within and without existing approaches,Footnote 81 an intellectual exercise that has eventually gone beyond existing approaches and shaped new frameworks to expand the boundaries of IR.Footnote 82

The symposium authors also criticise Global IR’s insistence upon geographical representation and inclusivity. They construe the end goal of Global IR as something akin to securing an equal representation of all nations in IR journals, a scenario they derisively label a ‘United Nations of IR.’Footnote 83 They furthermore ridicule the ‘cottage industry’ that maps geographical representation in IR journals as a limited form of inclusion. This, again, conflates means and ends. Global IR scholars do not study inequalities in publication patterns because they think the equal representation of all nations’ scholars in IR journals is the ‘be all and end all’ of Global IR. This is just a means to shed light on, and raise awareness about, prevailing inequalities in publishing patterns. If we did not study these patterns, we would not know IR’s ‘politics of knowledge.’ By now, many journals have begun to monitor and devise ways to increase geographical representation. We therefore find it hard to fathom that the symposium authors, some of whom have been on the editorial board of the leading journal, International Organization, do not find it disconcerting that approximately two percent of the articles ever published in that journal have an author whose affiliation is outside North America, Europe, Israel, Australia, or New Zealand.Footnote 84 That certainly is a controversial stance for scholars who portrayh themselves as allies in the project of globalising IR.

Promoting greater representativeness in IR does not mean that the mission of ‘Global IR’ stops there. The motive of Global IR lies in promoting a ‘politics of knowledge’ that is not just restricted to disciplinary reformism that seeks to modify existing approaches by adding more voices, but to encourage publications that aim at ‘disciplinary transformation’ by way of designing and applying innovative approaches, the approaches that allow us to rethink and broaden our views on what counts as a ‘good theory’ or ‘valid method’ for IR knowledge production.Footnote 85 It is in this sense that Global IR aims to develop alternative theories, methodologies, concepts, pedagogies, and policy initiatives that could outdo orthodox styles of studying the ‘global’, ‘globality’, and ‘globalism’,Footnote 86 thereby improving the shortfalls in the habitual Western-centric ways of doing IR.

The ‘inter/multidisciplinarity’ of Global IR: transcending historicism

Lastly, the symposium authors raise the issue of Global IR’s ‘ahistoricism.’ They identify a concern for widening IR’s historical frames of reference in Global IR, but opine that ‘the relationship between Global IR and history is the least developed part of the project’s agenda.’Footnote 87 Global History is indeed one productive pathway for research in Global IR, but the symposium also reads as a call for turning the entire Global IR project into ‘Global History for IR.’ Though the symposium authors claim not to offer a ‘single solution,’ most of its authors work within the domain of historical sociology/global history and advocate this domain as a single platform for Global IR. They nonetheless seem to unanimously prefer ‘thick relationalism,’ that is, the historical enquiries of global entanglements, circulations, and transboundary relations, as the correct pathway for Global IR. These kinds of contrapuntal historical enquiries into the hybridity of global entanglements have already been conducted by quite a few Global(ising) IR scholars.Footnote 88 Indeed, even the recent works of Amitav Acharya and Barry Buzan provide a well-argued view on the uneven and combined thoughts that go into the making of relational ‘global history.’Footnote 89 The recent works of AcharyaFootnote 90 are also more mindful of the problems with civilisational binaries, and in fact align rather well with the study of ‘patterns of connections…[and] structural entanglements.’Footnote 91

Despite the obvious merits of Global IR, turning Global IR into a Global History for IR is not without problems. One may wonder whether the thick relationalism inspired by Global History can permeate IR’s core narrative and transform it, thereby ultimately ‘replacing’ its conventional outlines. Thick relationalism can at best, and in fact does already, provide one of the many strands of Global IR. But following a ‘global history or nothing principle’ does not promise to offer the highest degree of inclusivity. An intellectual strategy of co-opting and then boundary policing ‘proper Global IR’ will inevitably have exclusionary effects. For instance, if we buy the argument that Global IR should challenge Eurocentrism only by exploring pan-Eurasian entanglements, and not by recovering the Asian or any other understudies,Footnote 92 does this imply that one should shy away from exploring alternative theories and practices of IR that are not as directly ‘entangled’? The circulations of ideas and practices in steppe culture or the Indian Ocean are fascinating avenues for doing Global IR, true. But would it be productive to premise Global IR scholarships on the exclusion of China’s pre-Qin philosophy, ancient Indian scriptures, traditional Andean practices, etc., just because transboundary relations were not as developed or evident when these knowledge traditions cropped up or evolved? Should Global IR completely rule out the study of a concept, theory, philosophy, cosmology, worldview, or an entire discipline coming from ‘nation X’ or ‘region Y’ just because it does not also study its historical-sociological global entanglements? Are we allowed to study these thought systems only after the imperial encounter with the ‘West’?

Moreover, if we focus only on global entanglements, we will miss how a large part of our everyday work is shaped through institutions located in a given socio-political context. Yes, there are transnational institutions, and the surveys of philanthropic foundations, scholarly associations, and journals have proven productive in comprehending the global flow of ideas. Yet, these transnational institutions are not creating seamless transboundary relations, and they remain unevenly distributed globally. At the very least, it is necessary to admit, as Manjeet S. Pardesi does in the ‘response section’ of the symposium,Footnote 93 that relationalism (thick or thin) might not work in all contexts and for all purposes. What is more, as Zeynep Gülşah Çapan warns,Footnote 94 an optimistic embrace of relationalism that takes global entanglements as the ultimate goal of globalising IR should be met with caution, especially if our studies of such entanglements remain focused on the ‘visible’ cases, that is, the cases of global entanglements ‘within’ the vocabularies already made meaningful to the core narratives of the discipline. We believe that the exclusive focus on visible cases of global entanglements may reinforce the problems of Western centrism, thereby impoverishing other possible solutions.

Of late, the non-Western parts of the globe have contributed several theories/concepts that originate from their ‘philosophical heritage,’ for example, Tianxia (all-under-heaven) from China, Advaita (non-duality) from India, basso ostinato (recurrent underlying motif) from Japan, ubuntu (collective personhood) from Africa, wahdat-al-wujud (oneness of being) from Turkey, and runa (from Latin America). But whenever a non-Western philosophical heritage is evoked to comprehend contemporary realities of IR, its merits are often assessed on the basis of its ‘historical limits’: tactlessly, a philosophical heritage is considered fruitful only to the extent that it succeeds within the temporal-spatial boundaries of its origin. In a way, history is mobilised as an instrument to truncate philosophy. But historical readings of a philosophy have their own limits. If a philosophy works at a particular historical juncture, it does not mean that it automatically transcends time; similarly, if a philosophy does not work at a particular historical juncture, it does not necessarily belong in the garbage bin of history. In this regard, the question that needs to be asked is this: Why should we necessarily accept ‘history’ (or records of the past) as a natural limit to future human potential?Footnote 95 The strategy to restrict Global IR to Global History with a relational ontological commitment runs counter to the project’s ethos. Global IR is not a single theory, ontology, or definition of universality that can be confined within a single discipline, whether history or philosophy. As a growing and evolving research programme, it offers ample space for disciplinary, interdisciplinary, and multidisciplinary specialists who aim to contribute to pluralising and globalising the study of how the world works.

Concluding remarks

The International Theory symposium on Global IR, edited by a range of prominent scholars, is a forceful intervention in the ongoing disciplinary debate on Global IR. In this rejoinder, we have read the symposium as an intervention that aims to advance the Global IR agenda by providing some useful correctives and cautionary notes for how not to advance Global IR – essentialism, geo-fixity, reformism, and ahistoricism – but as also limited by its narrow view of the Global IR agenda and too restrictive in its proposal for how to advance Global IR. We have explored how the four main critiques identified by the symposium can be and have been addressed through recent developments in the wider Global IR literature. Building on the symposium’s critical points and ideas, we have sought to provide a fuller view of Global IR and to consider ways in which ‘different’ worldviews and lifeworld experiences can be regarded as legitimate epistemological resources for IR – without (re)producing fixed, essentialised knowledge claims.

This is not to say the developments discussed and the suggestions offered above are without controversy or contention. Indeed, these are far from undisputed. Our intention here is not to propose one proper way of ‘doing Global IR.’ How (not) to advance Global IR is not a question to be settled once and for all, but an open one that requires continuous deliberation among diverse forms of knowledge emanating from all corners of the globe and by deep engagement with the key charges levelled against Global IR. Global IR should continue to be a collective work in progress. What makes it hang together, then, is not just its objective to address the issues of diversity, exclusion, or marginalisation that are entrenched in the discipline, but also to arrive at innovative, alternative non-dual or non-binary theoretical and practical findings that could further improve the general human condition at the current juncture in history. From this perspective, we are all fellow travellers, occasionally taking divergent paths but moving towards the same destination through a reasonably contrasting, complementary, and collective learning journey. We hope that our rejoinder will be read in this spirit of mutual learning, one that broadens Global IR understandings and sparks new inventions.

Footnotes

1 Barnett and Zarakol Reference Barnett and Zarakol2023, 428.

6 See, for example, Shani Reference Shani2008; Behera Reference Behera2007.

8 For critical reviews, see Fierke and Jabri Reference Fierke and Jabri2019; Anderl and Witt Reference Anderl and Witt2020; Murray Reference Murray2019; Gelardi Reference Gelardi2020a; Bilgin Reference Bilgin2021; Eun Reference Eun2023.

10 Barnett and Zarakol Reference Barnett and Zarakol2023, 429.

11 Ibid., 512.

12 Hui Reference Hui2023, 480.

13 Barnett and Zarakol Reference Barnett and Zarakol2023, 440.

14 Ibid., 512.

15 Tickner Reference Tickner2008.

16 Makarychev and Morozov Reference Makarychev and Morozov2013; Tsygankov Reference Tsygankov2023.

24 Mallavarapu Reference Mallavarapu2014, 8.

25 Shimizu Reference Shimizu2022.

27 Watanabe and Rösch Reference Watanabe and Rösch2018, 9.

28 Eun Reference Eun2020, 7; Seo and Cho Reference Seo and Cho2021, 619.

36 Acharya and Buzan Reference Acharya and Buzan2019.

37 Ozkaleli and Ozkaleli Reference Ozkaleli and Ozkaleli2022, 192.

40 Zhao and Hanafi Reference Zhao and Hanafi2024.

42 Shimizu Reference Shimizu2022. One caveat is worth noting: Nishida’s philosophy, particularly his notions of ‘nothingness’ and the ‘logic of place,’ was used to justify Japan’s imperial and colonial expansion. The concept of a harmonious, overarching ‘place’ was (re)interpreted to suggest that Japan had a leading role in unifying East Asia under the ‘Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere.’ This notion was subsequently used to assert Japan’s legitimate influence over colonised territories. Furthermore, Nishida’s ideas were appropriated by his students in Kyoto during the 1940s to frame an ideology of unique Eastern values and to support a Japan-centric international order in opposition to the Western-led world order. For instance, Nishida’s disciple, Tanabe Hajime, adapted his philosophy to bolster ‘ultra-nationalist’ discourse, reinforcing the idea that Japan was destined to establish a distinct East Asian order in resistance to Western dominance (see, e.g., Goto-Jones Reference Goto-Jones2005). This highlights the critical importance of examining how philosophies – whether Western or post-Western – are applied in the realm of policy, as much as the philosophies themselves. Examples of how Global IR can lead to policies that do not reify an ‘ethos of separation’ will be discussed in later sections.

45 Watanabe and Rösch Reference Watanabe and Rösch2018.

49 de Vienne and Nahum-Claudel Reference de Vienne and Nahum-Claudel2020.

50 Datta-Ray Reference Datta-Ray2015.

51 Hagström and Bremberg Reference Hagström and Bremberg2022.

53 Reddekop Reference Reddekop2021.

54 Barnett and Zarakol Reference Barnett and Zarakol2023, 431.

55 Barkawi, Murray, and Zarakol Reference Barkawi, Murray and Zarakol2023, 445.

57 Barkawi, Murray, and Zarakol Reference Barkawi, Murray and Zarakol2023, 449.

58 Hoffmann Reference Hoffmann1977, 49.

60 Eun Reference Eun2021, 10; Karkour and Vieira Reference Karkour and Vieira2023.

64 Barnett and Zarakol Reference Barnett and Zarakol2023, 437.

65 Guzzini Reference Guzzini2024.

68 Loke and Owen Reference Loke and Owen2024.

69 Karkour and Vieira Reference Karkour and Vieira2023; Bilgin and Smith Reference Bilgin and Smith2024.

70 Barnett and Zarakol Reference Barnett and Zarakol2023, 434.

71 Barkawi, Murray, and Zarakol Reference Barkawi, Murray and Zarakol2023.

72 Bayly Reference Bayly2023, 462–63.

73 Ibid., 463.

74 Acharya and Buzan Reference Acharya and Buzan2019, 304.

75 Foulon and Meibauer Reference Foulon and Meibauer2020; Cerioli Reference Cerioli2024.

76 Yan Reference Yan2020, 2.

77 Shahi Reference Shahi2019b, 119.

78 Gustafsson, Hagström, and Hanssen Reference Gustafsson, Hagström and Hanssen2019, 515.

84 This figure is calculated based on author affiliations in IO articles published from 1956 to 2024. Data retrieved from the Web of Science on 6 January 2025. The ‘West’ is defined here as the United States (78%), Canada (5%), the United Kingdom (5%), Europe (9%), Australia (1%), New Zealand (0.1%), and Israel (1%). When restricted to the 2000s, the figure increases but remains below 5% (at 4%).

87 Barnett and Lawson Reference Barnett and Lawson2023, 499.

89 Buzan and Acharya Reference Buzan and Acharya2021.

91 Barnett and Zarakol Reference Barnett and Zarakol2023, 439.

93 Pardesi Reference Pardesi2023.

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