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Secession or Sense of Belonging? Marginalization in the Context of Transnationality International Political Sociology (IF 3.5) Pub Date : 2024-10-23 Annette Idler, Dáire McGill
How does a state’s marginalization of borderland communities influence their sense of belonging? We argue that, in unstable regions in the Global South, such marginalization reinforces people’s sense of belonging to a transnational community. As we demonstrate, two causal mechanisms account for this process: the marginalization enhances (i) the border’s “disguising” quality that muddies diverse forms
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Keep Calm and Carry on? Fissure, Perception, and Narrative Contestation Following the Demise of the Crown International Political Sociology (IF 3.5) Pub Date : 2024-10-17 C Nicolai L Gellwitzki, Anne-Marie Houde, Lauren Rogers, Ben Rosher
On September 8, 2022, after more than 70 years on the throne, Queen Elizabeth II passed away. The responses among the public, media, and state institutions to the news were varied, with competing views on the role of the monarchy and the legacy of the queen. The questions this article seeks to answer are (1) how the monarch’s death introduced a fissure into the United Kingdom’s autobiographical narrative
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Justice “to Come”? Decolonial Deconstruction, from Postmodern Policymaking to the Black Horizon International Political Sociology (IF 3.5) Pub Date : 2024-10-17 Farai Chipato, David Chandler
This article explores the importance of what we call “decolonial deconstruction” for contemporary global politics and policy discourses and develops a critique of this approach. “Decolonial deconstruction” seeks to keep open policy processes, deconstructing liberal policy goals of peace, democracy, or justice as always “to come”. It emerged through a nexus of postmodern and decolonial framings, well
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Still Engaging, Not Avoiding, Contradictions: Conceptualizing Cooperative Research in Practical, Structural and Epistemic Terms International Political Sociology (IF 3.5) Pub Date : 2024-10-04 Philipp Lottholz, Karolina Kluczewska
Critical methodologies in International Political Sociology (IPS) and its intersecting fields and research traditions have increasingly coalesced around the idea that research should be done in dialogue, and possibly cooperation, with people rather than only about them. Drawing together research under this theme and wider debates on participatory, activist, and action research, alongside our own research
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Counter-Archiving Migration: Tracing the Records of Protests against UNHCR International Political Sociology (IF 3.5) Pub Date : 2024-10-04 Rachel Ibreck, Peter Rees, Martina Tazzioli
The archives of migration are piecemeal and scattered. This is both an epistemological problem, and a matter of political concern in an international order that forces people to migrate, racializes them, and renders them subject to violence. In response, we explore the potential of counter-archiving migration. First, we explain why archives matter politically, and consider which traces of migration
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Infodemic, Ignorance, or Imagination? The Problem of Misinformation in Health Emergencies International Political Sociology (IF 3.5) Pub Date : 2024-09-30 Jessica Kirk
In understanding and responding to the problem of misinformation during global health emergencies, health experts and organizations such as the WHO have relied on the concept of the “infodemic,” or the idea that there is such an overabundance of information that ascertaining trustworthy sources and reliable guidance is difficult. Is this the best way to understand the problem of misinformation, however
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Bio/Necropolitical Capture and Evasion on Africa–Europe Migrant Journeys International Political Sociology (IF 3.5) Pub Date : 2024-09-13 Özgün Erdener Topak
This paper draws on fieldwork interviews with migrants who fled their home countries (Somalia, Eritrea, and Sudan) and irregularly traveled through Sudan, Sahara, Libya, and the Mediterranean Sea, eventually reaching Europe. It demonstrates how, throughout their journeys, migrants were targeted by various armed groups (particularly non-state) for purposes including recruitment, extortion, ransom, immobilization
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“I Flip, Therefore I Am”: Smartphone Detoxing as a Practice of Sovereignty International Political Sociology (IF 3.5) Pub Date : 2024-09-11 Håvard Rustad Markussen
This article theorizes smartphone detoxing as a practice of sovereignty. The article begins by arguing that the smartphone enables the exercise of psychopolitical control, a new mode of neoliberal governmentality under which individuals are governed through the algorithmic modification of behavior. Against this background, smartphone detoxing can be seen as a practice of sovereignty in the sense that
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Establishing the Health Governance of Flows: Authority Performances and Expertise at the International Sanitary Conference of 1892 International Political Sociology (IF 3.5) Pub Date : 2024-09-05 Luis Aue
At the 1892 International Sanitary Conference in Venice, experts established international health politics as governing the flows of people, traffic, and information. This focus has remained ingrained in current health politics and shaped the international response to the COVID-19 pandemic. This paper focuses on the micropolitics among these experts to understand the emergence of such governance expertise
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Nomads’ Land: Exploring the Social and Political Life of the Nomad Category International Political Sociology (IF 3.5) Pub Date : 2024-08-24 Anthony Howarth, Jaakko Heiskanen, Sina Steglich, Nivi Manchanda, Adib Bencherif
The category of the nomad has gained a newfound salience in recent decades, ranging from public interest in “digital nomadism” to academic debates about “nomadic theory.” Faced with this upsurge of interest in nomadism, this collective discussion brings together five scholars of diverse theoretical and academic backgrounds to investigate the pasts, presents, and possible futures of the nomad category
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Tracing Diplomatic Tutelage: (Post)colonial Pedagogies and the Training of African Diplomats International Political Sociology (IF 3.5) Pub Date : 2024-08-01 Fiona McConnell, Ruth Craggs, Jonathan Harris
Throughout the twentieth century, colonies emerged from the so-called tutelage of European imperial powers to represent themselves as sovereign states. One consequence of this change was an expansion in overseas diplomatic training, aimed at inducting into international life the hundreds of diplomats required to staff new foreign services. This paper interrogates the pedagogical and (geo)political
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The Co-Ontological Securities of Gated Lifeworlds: Atmospheres and Foamed Immunologies under Late Modernity International Political Sociology (IF 3.5) Pub Date : 2024-08-01 Jaroslav Weinfurter
This article returns to the existentialist roots of ontological security theory (OST) and proposes a phenomenological re-reading of ontological security through the theoretical language of spherology and immunology in order to bring OST into a more substantive engagement with the spatial and immunological realities and practices of the globalizing world. Departing from the work of Peter Sloterdijk
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Struggle, Exit, “Resilience”—or How Precarious Workers Cope with Late Neoliberalism. Individual and Collective Agency of Female Migrant Domestic Workers in Spain International Political Sociology (IF 3.5) Pub Date : 2024-07-25 Zenia Hellgren
This article inquires the individual and collective agency of female migrant domestic workers in Spain. I use fieldwork conducted between 2013 and 2023 to examine the interplay between the migrant workers’ individual coping strategies, the claims-making strategies of the domestic workers’ trade union Sindihogar, and the structures they operate within and attempt to challenge. Drawing on contemporary
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Settler Colonialism and Mortal Dangers: Affective Responses to COVID-19 and the 2021 Israeli Bombings among Young Palestinians in Gaza International Political Sociology (IF 3.5) Pub Date : 2024-07-25 Silvia Pasquetti, Jemima Repo, Hala Shoman
The article examines the affective dynamics of collective survival and resistance under Israeli settler colonialism in the Gaza Strip. Focusing on Gaza as an under-researched enclave of Israeli settler colonialism, it analyzes how young Palestinians renegotiated their affective bonds in response to two coinciding deadly events: the COVID-19 pandemic and the 2021 Israeli bombings. Theoretically, we
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When the World Is an Object: On the Governmental Promise of a Digital Twin Earth International Political Sociology (IF 3.5) Pub Date : 2024-06-27 Delf Rothe
A growing body of literature studies how expert practices constitute issues such as climate change, migration, or public health as international objects of expertise. The article contributes to this research agenda by highlighting the role of digital visual technologies and infrastructures in the constitution and governance of these international objects. It develops the concept of visual objects and
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The Politics of Foreign Terrorist Fighters in Europe: The Deterritorialization and Reterritorialization of Citizens? International Political Sociology (IF 3.5) Pub Date : 2024-06-27 Elisabeth Johansson-Nogués, Aitor Bonsoms
In the wake of the fall of the Daesh Islamic State “Caliphate” in 2019, the international community has been faced with the fact that thousands of displaced persons are stranded in Iraqi and Syrian detention centers. This article interrogates the governmental policies of ten Western European countries toward their nationals and legal residents held in the prisons and camps. We analyze the discourse
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Thinking through 1492: IR's Historiographic Operation(s) and the Politics of Benchmark Dates International Political Sociology (IF 3.5) Pub Date : 2024-06-25 Julia Costa López, Zeynep Gülşah Çapan, Ayşe Zarakol, Atsuko Watanabe, Adhemar Mercado
This Collective Discussion aims to open up space for an international political sociology of the production of historical knowledge that interrogates the politics around benchmark dates and what becomes knowable and unknowable through them. Specifically, it examines 1492 as a historiographical device through which to unpack how the discipline of IR knows history. 1492 presents a relevant case for this
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From Security-Space to Time-Race: Reimagining Borders and Migration in Global Politics International Political Sociology (IF 3.5) Pub Date : 2024-06-22 Maja Zehfuss, Nick Vaughan-Williams
In an apparent departure from responses to the so-called 2015 “migration” crisis, Ukrainians displaced by the war have been welcomed relatively unbureaucratically by European states. Yet, despite this, they are positioned as a problem to be solved, a disruption to the normal order and state system. This article asks what this problematization of “migrants” reveals about the dominant system of thought
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Securitization of Energy Transitions in Estonia, Finland and Norway International Political Sociology (IF 3.5) Pub Date : 2024-06-22 Marja Helena Sivonen, Paula Kivimaa
This paper analyses the extent to which zero-carbon energy transitions are a securitized phenomenon in selected countries and what that means for sustainability transitions more broadly. Without taking a normative stance on securitization, we focus on the ways in which security is constructed through in-depth interviews with experts in the energy, security, and defense sectors in Estonia, Finland,
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Apprenticeship in Diplomacy, or How I Became Another Replaceable Intern at the OECD International Political Sociology (IF 3.5) Pub Date : 2024-06-22 Frederik Carl Windfeld
What can we learn about diplomacy by studying its practice through the body of an apprentice? Drawing on the works of Loïc Wacquant, this article argues that to understand the making of background dispositions, tacit rules, and situated know-how in international politics’ diverse fields of practice, researchers ought to consider apprenticeship as a concept and a methodological device. This argument
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Cucktales: Race, Sex, and Enjoyment in the Reactionary Memescape International Political Sociology (IF 3.5) Pub Date : 2024-06-21 Uygar Baspehlivan
This article makes a critical contribution to the study of digital reactionary movements by tracing the resonant circulation of “the cuck” memes across various levels of racialized and gendered subjectivity. It argues that the cuck meme resonates through composing an affective narrative of deferred and stolen enjoyment at the intersection of personal, social, and international politics. It follows
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Individual Vulnerability and Collective Resistance Under Surveillance: Claiming the Right to Existence against Discriminatory Suspicion International Political Sociology (IF 3.5) Pub Date : 2024-06-21 Simon Hogue
Hasan Elahi’s Tracking Transience (2003–2020) was an artistic performance of hypervisibility. Initiated in response to being misidentified as a terrorist, preemptively arrested, and interrogated by the FBI, the artist created a comprehensive life log documenting his everyday life for all to see. Despite transformations to the surveillance environment, the performance raised a question that remains
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The Social Aesthetics of Digital Diplomacy International Political Sociology (IF 3.5) Pub Date : 2024-06-19 Anna Helene Kvist Møller, Rebecca Adler-Nissen, Yevgeniy Golovchenko, Kristin Anabel Eggeling
This article presents a theory and analysis of the social aesthetics of digital diplomacy. Drawing inspiration from the sociology of taste and visual theory, we conceptualize social aesthetics as the encoding of social norms and hierarchies into visual representations. Through this lens, we examine how the multitude of images uploaded by diplomats on social media daily contribute to the symbolic authority
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Coloniality, Race, and Europeanness: Britain’s Borders after Brexit International Political Sociology (IF 3.5) Pub Date : 2024-06-19 Aleksandra Lewicki
The scholarship on the politics of immigration often frames governments’ responses to far-right mobilization as a return to border closures and a rowing back on neoliberalism. In this article, I draw on and expand the scholarship on coloniality to address the limitations of this diagnosis. Specifically, I explore the role of political mobilization in the making of the post-Brexit border regime. My
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Animacy and the Agency of Spiritual Beings in Pluriversal Societies International Political Sociology (IF 3.5) Pub Date : 2024-05-31 Amaya Querejazu
The concept of agency has long been a focal point of research in the social sciences. While traditional discussions primarily centered on human agency, recent scholarship has increasingly turned its attention to agency beyond the human realm. This paper introduces a framework for comprehending the agency of spiritual beings within complex pluriversal sociopolitical systems. It contends that exploring
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How Best to Be Egyptian? The “Honorable Citizen” and the Making of the Counter-revolutionary Subject International Political Sociology (IF 3.5) Pub Date : 2024-05-30 Amira Abdelhamid
Despite growing interest in studying counter-revolution in Egypt, scholars have neglected the ways in which the regulation of normativity governs conduct and discourages resistance. This article argues that discourses of normativity in Egypt have produced counter-revolutionary subjectivities, without whom the counter-revolution could not have succeeded. These subjectivities are constructed through
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Military Atrocity, National Identity, and Warrior Masculinity on Trial International Political Sociology (IF 3.5) Pub Date : 2024-05-30 Hannah Partis-Jennings
The article explores different and contested narrations surrounding alleged war crimes by former Australian soldiers in Afghanistan, with a particular focus on one veteran with considerable public standing, Ben Roberts-Smith. It shows how certain stories told to identify and condemn acts of extra-legal violence, work to separate these acts out as exceptional and different from wider violence in war
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Playing with the News on Reddit: The Politics Game on r/The_Donald International Political Sociology (IF 3.5) Pub Date : 2024-05-30 Robert Topinka, Cassian Osborne-Carey, Alan Finlayson
Research into online forms of far-right, alt-right, populist, and supremacist politics has raised questions about the extent to which social media enables or constitutes extremist affects and ideologies. Building on this research and through a case study of how a pro-Trump community on Reddit made sense of news events and sought to contest their representation, this paper explores the relationship
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Soviet Active Measures and the Second Cold War: Security, Truth, and the Politics of Self International Political Sociology (IF 3.5) Pub Date : 2024-05-21 Jeffrey Whyte
This paper explores the emergence of “Soviet active measures” in US political discourse during the “Second Cold War” of the early 1980s. It follows the efforts of the Active Measures Working Group, a little-known interagency organization led by Reagan administration appointees that constructed an image of Soviet active measures as a threat to national security. I detail, especially, how the Working
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Gender Washing War: Arms Manufacturers and the Hijacking of #InternationalWomensDay International Political Sociology (IF 3.5) Pub Date : 2024-05-09 Natalie Jester, Rosie Walters
If asked what “arms manufacturer” first brings to mind, few people would likely answer “women’s rights.” And yet, each International Women’s Day (IWD), leading global arms manufacturers present themselves as working to help bring about gender equality. “Gender washing” refers to corporate social responsibility communications aimed at presenting a corporation as empowering to women and girls, even while
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Late Modern War and theGeos International Political Sociology (IF 3.5) Pub Date : 2024-04-12 Mark Griffiths, Henry Redwood
This article works toward an ontology of war centered on the life of the planet, or geos. Noting a disciplinary tendency to focus on the makers of war, we ask: What if our analyses of war begin not with the technologies of killing but with the life that is targeted? Our response proceeds in four sections. We first identify a “militarized ontology” of war that forms through the ways that militaries
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Communicating through Protocols: The Case of Diplomatic Credential Ceremonies International Political Sociology (IF 3.5) Pub Date : 2024-04-07 Roni Berkowitz, Gadi Heimann, Zohar Kampf
This study questions to what extent state agents invest efforts in building interpersonal relations with their counterparts. It is based on data collected during two years of ethnographic fieldwork at the Israeli president’s residence, where we observed credential ceremonies involving ambassadors from twenty-three states and interviewed the president’s advisors. We consider the credential ceremony
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Memory Fusion, Diplomatic Agency, and Armenian Genocide Recognition in the Czech Republic International Political Sociology (IF 3.5) Pub Date : 2024-03-28 Daniel Fittante
Scholars often emphasize how right-wing political actors in Europe use memory laws to undermine democratic traditions and revise historical accounts. But a broad range of political actors (with diverse motivations) support memory laws. Synthesizing research in international political sociology and memory politics, this analysis examines the relational and social practices of diplomats from small states
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Commodified State Feminism: The Entanglements of Feminist Commodity Activism and Feminist Politics in a Nordic Welfare State International Political Sociology (IF 3.5) Pub Date : 2024-03-20 Hanna Ylöstalo, Emma Lamberg
This article analyzes the entanglements of feminist commodity activism and state feminism. Feminist commodity activism refers to consumption and commodified communication as modes of feminist political participation. Earlier research on these topics has focused on the business sector and on media and popular culture, largely sidelining the state as a site of feminism. This article addresses the increasingly
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Policing the Enforcers: The Governmentality of Immigration Controls International Political Sociology (IF 3.5) Pub Date : 2024-03-13 Erica Consterdine
As border controls have spanned from the territorial border to the interior, outsourcing controls to non-state actors has become the integral technology in everyday bordering. Whilst the racialized consequences of deputizing controls have been illuminated, the governmentality and biopolitical implications of these outsourcing processes have been overlooked. This paper argues that as the architecture
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Socio-Spatial Multiplicity in World Politics: Non-Western Regional Imaginations of the Indo-Pacific International Political Sociology (IF 3.5) Pub Date : 2024-03-13 Atsuko Watanabe
Originally a biogeographic term, “Indo-Pacific” is increasingly replacing “Asia-Pacific” in political discourse. This is not merely a linguistic matter but also has political implications. However, the meaning of “Indo-Pacific” remains unclear, and its implications are contested. While it has attracted the attention of a wide spectrum of political pundits, the regional designation “Indo-Pacific” is
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International Political Sociology through the Colonial Mirror: A Contrapuntal Reading of the Spanish Civil War International Political Sociology (IF 3.5) Pub Date : 2024-03-12 Alejandro Colás
This paper invokes Edward Said’s notion of counterpoint to present a transnational sociological account of the Spanish Civil War, 1936–1939. This contrapuntal reading raises questions of sovereignty, violence, and identity, which—filtered through a political sociological lens—offer novel perspectives on the power of empire and colonialism in relation to these key IR categories. Specifically, I argue
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By What Jurisdiction? Law, Settler Colonialism, and the Geographical Assumptions of IR Theory International Political Sociology (IF 3.5) Pub Date : 2024-03-05 Freya Irani
In this article, I consider critical writings on territory in International Relations, focusing on recent work on U.S. practices of extraterritorial jurisdiction. I suggest that, while such work has importantly traced the multiple ways in which U.S. authority often exceeds the supposed territorial boundaries of the United States, it has nonetheless failed to reckon with the contested and uneven nature
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Navigating Anxiety: International Politics, Identity Narratives, and Everyday Defense Mechanisms International Political Sociology (IF 3.5) Pub Date : 2024-03-05 Anne-Marie Houde
How do individuals navigate international politics and mitigate the anxieties it elicits in the everyday? Giddensian literature on ontological security suggests that (collective) internalized routines and narratives provide a sense of certainty and stability that enable individuals to “go on” with their daily lives. This article adopts a Kleinian psychoanalytical approach to show that when faced with
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Madonna versus “Mother Russia?” Visual Anthropology of Loneliness and Gendered Nationalism on Russian 2021–2023 Political Posters International Political Sociology (IF 3.5) Pub Date : 2024-02-21 Sergei Akopov
This article is aimed at transdisciplinary (critical International Relations, visual anthropology, and existential philosophy) analysis of Russian gendered nationalism and masculine ontological insecurities. It explores and re-imagines how visual representations of “Mother Russia” became signifiers of the phallocentric voice of the Russian gendered state. What can return the voice back to the “invisible
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Reconceptualizing the Nation in Sanctuary Practices: Toward a Progressive, Relational National Politics? International Political Sociology (IF 3.5) Pub Date : 2024-02-21 Catrin Wyn Edwards, Rhys Dafydd Jones
This article explores sanctuary in Wales, focusing on the Welsh Government’s recent declaration to become a Nation of Sanctuary (NoS), and identifying how the national scale provides an alternative locus for progressive sanctuary measures. In revealing the nation’s emergence as another crucial site of sanctuary, the work reconceptualizes the nation’s place in sanctuary policies and practices in two
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Reconceptualizing Advocacy through the Women, Peace and Security Agenda: Embodiment, Relationality, and Power International Political Sociology (IF 3.5) Pub Date : 2024-01-27 Columba Achilleos-Sarll
This article critically examines the embodied and relational politics of networked advocacy in the case of the Women, Peace and Security (WPS) agenda in the United Kingdom. Moving beyond liberal framings that position WPS advocacy as an attempt to overcome gender exclusion from peace and security policymaking, this article is concerned instead with the gendered, racialized, and classed logics and hierarchies
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Preserving Law and Order: How Institutions Implementing International Norms on Refugee Protection Can Restrict Asylum Outcomes International Political Sociology (IF 3.5) Pub Date : 2024-01-27 Angela Y McClean
The international frameworks on refugee protection, including the 1951 Convention and the 1967 Protocol Relating to the Status of Refugees, are among the strongest norms to govern international mobility. Despite the salience and universality of these international norms, however, asylum outcomes, as indicated by refugee recognition rates (RRRs), vary extensively across state parties. The variation
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Civilizational Politics at the Commonwealth Games: Identity, Coloniality and LGBTIQ+ Inclusion International Political Sociology (IF 3.5) Pub Date : 2024-01-24 Patrick J Vernon
In 2022, the United Kingdom hosted the Commonwealth Games in Birmingham, with this games featuring a pride programme that promoted LGBTIQ+ inclusion around the Commonwealth. With British colonial norms and laws often providing the origins of homophobic and transphobic policies in Commonwealth member states, this paper sees LGBTIQ+ inclusivity narratives at the games as a significant object of study
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World Order Transformation from the Grassroots: Global South Social Movements and the Transcendence of Established Approaches to International Change International Political Sociology (IF 3.5) Pub Date : 2024-01-13 Thomas Davies
In contrast to traditional top-down perspectives, this article aims to shed alternative light on the prospects for change in global order through evaluating how perspectives offered among social movements located in the Global South consider how change can take place beyond established approaches. With reference to perspectives offered among the Global Tapestry of Alternatives, the article elucidates
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“If You Destroy Our Children, I Will Kill You”: Biopolitical Childhood in Southeast Asia’s War on Drugs International Political Sociology (IF 3.5) Pub Date : 2024-01-13 Euan Raffle
This article explores how the war on drugs in Southeast Asia upholds the protection of the young as a key justification for extrajudicial killings carried out by the state. As many as 30,000 extrajudicial killings took place during Philippine former President Rodrigo Duterte’s war on drugs between 2016 and 2022, echoing a similar anti-drug campaign in Thailand in 2003, which saw around 3,000 people
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Lessons from the Viral Body Politic: Borders and the Possibilities of a More-than-Human Worldmaking International Political Sociology (IF 3.5) Pub Date : 2024-01-13 Stefanie Fishel, Christine Agius
Bordering practices have been a central and controversial feature of the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic. Closed borders, lockdowns, and restrictions on movement and individual “freedoms” have revived concepts of the biopolitical “state of exception” and state control. In this article, we argue that biopolitical critiques of responses to the pandemic fail to grasp the opportunity to rethink worldmaking and instead
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Curated Power: The Performative Politics of (Industry) Events International Political Sociology (IF 3.5) Pub Date : 2024-01-03 Ruben Kremers, Lena Rethel
Since the turn of the millennium, there has been an increased interest in the social performance of power in international political sociology. At the same time, recent years have seen the growing popularity of event ethnographic research approaches. In this article, we develop the concept of “curated power” as a tool to explore the performative enactment of power at and through conferences and events
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The Spirit of the Convention and the Letter of the Colony: Refugees Defining States in a British Overseas Territory International Political Sociology (IF 3.5) Pub Date : 2023-11-10 Olga Demetriou
Whereas asylum policy is predicated on the assumption that states define refugees, this paper examines how refugees define states. Through the legal case of refugees stranded on a British military base in Cyprus since 1998, I show how refugees and the states that grant them or deny them protection become co-constitutive. The processes involved in judicial activism delineate the modalities through which
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Teaching and Learning Reflexivity in the World Politics Classroom International Political Sociology (IF 3.5) Pub Date : 2023-10-19 Roxani Krystalli
Complementing discussions of reflexivity as a research practice, this article turns its attention to the classroom. How does a pedagogy that invites students to practice reflexivity represent possibilities for thinking, writing, and imagining otherwise in scholarly engagements with world politics? In response to this question, I explore the dilemmas, challenges, and possibilities students encounter
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“Be Creative, Be Friends and Share Cultural Experiences”: Genre, Politics, and Fun at the Junior Eurovision Song Contest International Political Sociology (IF 3.5) Pub Date : 2023-10-19 Zoë Jay
This article examines children’s political agency in the context of the Junior Eurovision Song Contest. The Eurovision Song Contest is widely recognized as a political arena—a space for nation branding and soft diplomacy, narratives of European musical and democratic harmony, and protests over global political events. But despite filling similar roles to their adult counterparts, the young performers’
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Digital–Nondigital Assemblages: Data, Paper Trails, and Migrants’ Scattered Subjectivities at the Border International Political Sociology (IF 3.5) Pub Date : 2023-09-04 Lucrezia Canzutti, Martina Tazzioli
This paper argues that the border regime works through entanglements of digital and nondigital data and of “low-tech” and “high-tech” technologies. It suggests that a critical analysis of the assemblages between digital and nondigital requires exploring their effects of subjectivation on those who are labeled as “migrants.” The paper starts with a critique of the presentism and techno-hype that pervade
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Visual Necropolitics and Visual Violence: Theorizing Death, Sight, and Sovereign Control of Palestine International Political Sociology (IF 3.5) Pub Date : 2023-08-21 Miriam Deprez
The Israeli military’s occupation of Palestinian territory relies heavily on its ability to shape the visual environment and set the terms of how Palestinians may see and be seen. However, the relationship between violent occupation and violent visualities has yet to be fully theorized. This article gathers several conceptual strands—biopolitics, visual biopolitics, and necropolitics—to theorize what
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An Autoethnography of Hybrid IR Scholars: De-Territorializing the Global IR Debate International Political Sociology (IF 3.5) Pub Date : 2023-08-14 Haro L Karkour, Marco Vieira
Who can speak from the perspective of the Global South? In answering this question, Global International Relations (IR) finds itself in a cul de sac: rather than globalize IR, Global IR essentializes non-Western categories by associating difference and knowledge to place (countries, regions, and civilizations) which occludes de-territorialized forms of knowledge production. To reach out for these forms
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Political Visual Literacy International Political Sociology (IF 3.5) Pub Date : 2023-07-05 Yoav Galai
Visual politics is a fast-growing field and much of it is focused on images that inspire criticism. This tendency results in a lack of attention to oppressive visual practices. A political visual literacy approaches all visual practices as being layered with different “visual truths” that were developed in response to political commitments over time. These “visual truths” inflected visual practices
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(Dis)possessive Borders, (Dis)possessed Bodies: Race and Property at the Postcolonial European Borders International Political Sociology (IF 3.5) Pub Date : 2023-05-25 Tarsis Brito
There has been a profusion of institutionalized practices of confiscation and destruction of migrants’ belongings during European bordering operations conducted by the police and border authorities. Clothes, shoes, money, food, mobile phones, and even water have been among the items seized by authorities, a practice that exposes migrants to multiple risks. That said, despite the pervasiveness of current
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More than Extraction: Rethinking Data's Colonial Political Economy International Political Sociology (IF 3.5) Pub Date : 2023-03-30 Catriona Gray
This article offers a novel conceptual framework to enable empirical investigation and analysis of the different ways in which contemporary data practices are entangled with colonialism. Departing from recent theorizations of the politics and political economy of data and data-driven technologies, including the theory of so-called data colonialism, I argue for a historicized and differentiated account
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Reconciling Theory and Practice: Confronting Violent Histories in Poland and Israel–Palestine International Political Sociology (IF 3.5) Pub Date : 2023-03-20 Yifat Gutman
The role of violent histories and their legacies in reconciliation processes has been a central question in debates on reconciliation and nation building after conflict: whether, how, and when painful events should be remembered in post-conflict and post-transition societies. A dominant approach to this question since the 1980s has been the “reconciliation paradigm,” which views addressing violent
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Methods Regimes in Global Governance: The Politics of Evidence-Making in Global Health International Political Sociology (IF 3.5) Pub Date : 2023-03-20 Annabelle Littoz-Monnet, Juanita Uribe
This article opens up the blackbox through which evidence is selected and assessed in the making of guidelines and recommendations in global governance, through an exploration of “methods regimes.” Methods regimes are a special kind of sociomaterial arrangement, which govern the production and validation of knowledge, by establishing a clear hierachy between alternative forms of research designs. When
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“Citizenship Cheaters” before the Law: Reading Fraud-Based Denaturalization in Norway through Lenses of Exceptionalism International Political Sociology (IF 3.5) Pub Date : 2023-03-04 Simon Roland Birkvad
For decades, fraud-based denaturalization was hardly used in Norway. In the 2015–2016 “refugee crisis,” however, the right-wing government decided to reinforce efforts to expose “citizenship cheaters.” This article asks how this decision emerged, what arguments the government articulated to legitimize this decision, and how parliament responded. I examine the Norwegian case by reworking Schmitt and