Informal International Relations

T. Tieku
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

There has been a proliferation of works on informal dimensions of international relations. Putting the scholarship under the banner of informal international relations (IIR), [A1] the value preposition of research and publications on informal aspects of international political life is critically explored in order to chart promising pathways to further research in this growing field of study. Three generations of IIR scholarship may be identified. The first-generation scholarship took the IIR approach without explicitly acknowledging it. The second-generation scholars treated it primarily as an anomaly that ought to be explained. The third-generation scholarship seeks to give IIR a conceptual clarity, theorize it, and show the analytical utility of the concept. Although the IIR scholarship has given us a new outlook into international political life, the IR literature on informality is biased in at least three ways. First, it focuses mostly on informal politics in international organizations (IOs) housed in Western Europe and North American states. It is insightful and informative in the discussion of informality in member countries of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) but lacks similar cutting-edge analysis when it comes to informal aspects of international life in the rest of the world. The IIR scholarship neglects the rich tapestry of materials and insights from the Global South and Eastern Europe. Second, it is dominated by studies of informal governance. Other aspects of informal relations, namely, informal practices, processes, norms, and informal rules, have received little attention. Third, it is dominated by rational choice approaches. Perspectives such as critical constructivism, practice theory, intersectionality, neocolonialism, decolonial perspective, and postcolonialism, among others, are rarely used by third-generation scholars to explore informal international life. Finally, IIR ideas are deployed primarily as a last resort or as something used to explain negative political outcomes. IR scholars turn to the informal as a unit of analysis when traditional issue-areas such as formal state structures, formal IOs, official processes, codified norms, and written rules cannot help, and they deploy informal ideas only when well-known variables including state power, powerful registered domestic groups, and legalized nonstate actors are unable to explain a given political problem. But as those who have studied the issue carefully observed, the informal rather than the formal should be the baseline for IR analysis. The discipline of IR will be improved considerably if informality is prioritized and all facets of informal international life are explored in a systematic manner.
非正式国际关系
关于国际关系非正式层面的著作大量出现。将学术置于非正式国际关系(IIR)的旗帜下,[A1]批判性地探讨了关于国际政治生活非正式方面的研究和出版物的价值介词,以便为这一不断发展的研究领域的进一步研究绘制有希望的路径。IIR奖学金可分为三代。第一代奖学金采用了IIR方法,但没有明确承认它。第二代学者主要把它当作一种应该解释的反常现象。第三代奖学金旨在使IIR概念清晰,理论化,并展示该概念的分析效用。尽管国际关系奖学金为我们提供了一个了解国际政治生活的新视角,但国际关系中有关非正式性的文献至少在三个方面存在偏见。首先,它主要关注设在西欧和北美国家的国际组织(IOs)中的非正式政治。在讨论经济合作与发展组织(OECD)成员国的非正式行为方面,该书见解深刻,内容丰富,但在涉及世界其他地区国际生活的非正式方面时,该书缺乏类似的前沿分析。IIR奖学金忽略了来自全球南欧和东欧的丰富材料和见解。其次,它以非正式治理的研究为主。非正式关系的其他方面,即非正式实践、过程、规范和非正式规则,很少受到注意。第三,以理性选择方法为主。批判建构主义、实践理论、交叉性、新殖民主义、非殖民主义和后殖民主义等观点很少被第三代学者用来探索非正式的国际生活。最后,IIR的理念主要被用作最后的手段,或者用来解释负面的政治结果。当传统问题领域(如正式的国家结构、正式的国际组织、官方程序、成文规范和书面规则)无法提供帮助时,国际关系学者将非正式作为分析单位,只有当众所周知的变量(包括国家权力、强大的注册国内团体和合法的非国家行为者)无法解释给定的政治问题时,他们才会采用非正式思想。但正如那些仔细研究过这个问题的人所观察到的那样,非正式的而不是正式的应该是IR分析的基准。如果将非正式性列为优先事项,并以系统的方式探讨非正式国际生活的所有方面,国际关系学科将得到很大改善。
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