The Healthy Trends of International Relations Research


Autoria(s): Davies, Sara E.
Data(s)

2012

Resumo

As the end of the Cold War approached in 1989, Caroline Thomas argued: “It is important that the discipline [International Relations, IR] should address the issue of disease and more broadly, health, not simply to facilitate containment of disease transmission across international borders but also because central notions of justice, equity, efficiency and order are involved” (1989:273).1 Ten years later, Craig Murphy echoed these sentiments. Murphy (2001: 352) proposed that IR had yet to grapple with the political consequences of growing inequality between the world’s rich and poor, and areas such as health—where these inequalities were most stark—should become the field’s core business. How IR’s theories and methods would approach these issues was less clear. Bettcher and Yach (1998) cautioned that IR would be unable to develop progressive research projects that explored global health diplomacy as a global public good without adopting new perspectives and methods. Others warned that the expansion of security studies into areas such as global health would weaken the intellectual coherency of the field (Walt 1991:213). Taking its cue from the recent Ng and Prah Ruger (2011) study, this paper returns to these concerns to briefly explore key trends and potential future concerns of research in IR on health...

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/72930/

Relação

DOI:10.1111/j.1749-5687.2012.00166_2.x

Davies, Sara E. (2012) The Healthy Trends of International Relations Research. International Political Sociology, 6(3), pp. 316-320.

Fonte

Faculty of Law; Australian Centre for Health Law Research; School of Law

Tipo

Journal Article