Captive minds: The function and agency of Eastern Europe in International Security Studies
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Captive minds : The function and agency of Eastern Europe in International Security Studies. / Mälksoo, Maria.
In: Journal of International Relations and Development, Vol. 24, No. 4, 28.07.2021, p. 866-889.Research output: Contribution to journal › Journal article › Research › peer-review
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TY - JOUR
T1 - Captive minds
T2 - The function and agency of Eastern Europe in International Security Studies
AU - Mälksoo, Maria
PY - 2021/7/28
Y1 - 2021/7/28
N2 - This article unpacks the ways Eastern Europe (broadly conceived) has featured as a space, trope, and scholarly origin in major International Security Studies (ISS) and International Relations (IR) journals over the past three decades. A framing and authorship analysis in 18 disciplinary journals between 1991 and 2019 demonstrates how the region has been instrumental for the ISS subfield as an exemplary student of the Western theory and practice of IR. Eastern Europe has served as a symbolic space for exercising the civilising mission of the West and testing the related theories (security community building, democratisation, modernisation, Europeanisation, norm diffusion) in practice. The relative dearth of East European voices in ISS and leading IR theory journals speaks volumes about the politics of knowledge production and the analytical economy of the field. The positionality of East European ‘captive minds’ complicates ‘worlding’ IR from the region. The East European subalterns are largely enfolded in the definitive discourses of the field, and their power through disciplinary journals remains marginal.
AB - This article unpacks the ways Eastern Europe (broadly conceived) has featured as a space, trope, and scholarly origin in major International Security Studies (ISS) and International Relations (IR) journals over the past three decades. A framing and authorship analysis in 18 disciplinary journals between 1991 and 2019 demonstrates how the region has been instrumental for the ISS subfield as an exemplary student of the Western theory and practice of IR. Eastern Europe has served as a symbolic space for exercising the civilising mission of the West and testing the related theories (security community building, democratisation, modernisation, Europeanisation, norm diffusion) in practice. The relative dearth of East European voices in ISS and leading IR theory journals speaks volumes about the politics of knowledge production and the analytical economy of the field. The positionality of East European ‘captive minds’ complicates ‘worlding’ IR from the region. The East European subalterns are largely enfolded in the definitive discourses of the field, and their power through disciplinary journals remains marginal.
KW - Faculty of Social Sciences
KW - captive minds
KW - Eastern Europe
KW - International Security Studies
KW - knowledge production
KW - 'worlding' IR
UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/s41268-021-00230-2
UR - https://link.springer.com/epdf/10.1057/s41268-021-00230-2?sharing_token=8nJ8fUqYaHYY8W_lQ1HHn1xOt48VBPO10Uv7D6sAgHt31ATTMvZuCJfj-GTOBsD3n_vJfUFctrf7wbeW1GRPv9BsD-DFpmoUyMtLRRDFTj8pw6VzfzCVqY2HymtkSxgolsLwq7B_K2Dq_Gip88aT8abSLUcGP-WFc67s3mCi2jE%3D
U2 - 10.1057/s41268-021-00230-2
DO - 10.1057/s41268-021-00230-2
M3 - Journal article
VL - 24
SP - 866
EP - 889
JO - Journal of International Relations and Development
JF - Journal of International Relations and Development
SN - 1408-6980
IS - 4
ER -
ID: 284499644