It is time for International Relations (IR) to join the relational revolution afoot in the natural and social sciences. To do so, more careful reflection is needed on cosmological assumptions in the sciences and also in the study and practice of international relations. In particular it is argued here that we need to pay careful attention to whether and how we think 'relationally'. Building a conversation between relational cosmology, developed in natural sciences,
and critical social theory, this book seeks to develop a new perspective on how to think relationally in and around the study of IR. International Relations in a Relational
Universe asks: What kind of cosmological background assumptions do we make as we tackle international relations today and where do our assumptions (about states, individuals, or the international) come from? And can we reorient our cosmological imaginations towards more relational understanding of the universe and what would this mean for the study and practice of international politics? The book argues that we live in a world without 'things', a world of
processes and relations. It also suggests that we live in relations which exceed the boundaries of the human and the social, in planetary relations with plants and animals. Rethinking conceptual premises of IR, Kurki
points towards a 'planetary politics' perspective within which we can reimagine IR as a field of study and also political practices, including the future of democracy.
It is time for International Relations (IR) to join the relational revolution afoot in the natural and social sciences. To do so, more careful reflection is needed on cosmological assumptions in the sciences and also in the study and practice of international relations. In particular it is argued here that we need to pay careful attention to whether and how we think 'relationally'. Building a conversation between relational cosmology, developed in natural sciences,
and critical social theory, this book seeks to develop a new perspective on how to think relationally in and around the study of IR. International Relations in a Relational
Universe asks: What kind of cosmological background assumptions do we make as we tackle international relations today and where do our assumptions (about states, individuals, or the international) come from? And can we reorient our cosmological imaginations towards more relational understanding of the universe and what would this mean for the study and practice of international politics? The book argues that we live in a world without 'things', a world of
processes and relations. It also suggests that we live in relations which exceed the boundaries of the human and the social, in planetary relations with plants and animals. Rethinking conceptual premises of IR, Kurki
points towards a 'planetary politics' perspective within which we can reimagine IR as a field of study and also political practices, including the future of democracy.
Introduction: International Relations and Relational Cosmology
Part 1. Of cosmology
1: Cosmology - 'social' and 'scientific'
2: Scientific cosmologies
3: Relational cosmology
Part 2. Of situated knowledge, relations and ethics
4: Stretching situated knowledge
5: Relations, human and non-human
6: Ethics, in relations?
Part 3. Reorienting
7: Reorienting to the international, the global and the
planetary
Conclusion: Five challenges for IR and ir
Milja Kurki is a Professor at the Department of International
Politics in Aberystwyth University. Her areas of interest are
international relations theory, philosophy of science, democracy
and democracy promotion, critical theory, and more recently
scientific cosmology, social-natural science nexus and
posthumanism. She is a co-editor of the journal International
Relations, Director of the Planetary Challenges and Politics
Centre, and the Director of
Research in the Department of International Politics at Aberystwyth
University.
[This book] brings a very refined and important, even necessary,
theoretical contribution to IR and will interest every student and
scholar attentively following theoretical debates in the
discipline.
*Ramon Blanco, Federal University of Latin-American Integration,
Brazil, International Affairs*
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