Imperial Mission, ‘Scientific’ Method: an Alternative Account of the Origins of IR

Main author: Thakur, Vineet
Other authors: Davis, Alexander E.
Vale, Peter
Format: Journal Article           
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id eprints-24078
recordtype eprints
institution SOAS, University of London
collection SOAS Research Online
language English
language_search English
topic JZ International relations
description This article offers an alternative account of the origins of academic IR to the conventional Aberystwyth-centered one. Informed by a close reading of the archive, our narrative proposes that the ideas and method of what was to become IR were first developed in South Africa. Here, we suggest how the creation of a racially-ordered state served as a template for the British Commonwealth and later the World State. We draw further on the British dominions’ tour of Lionel Curtis, founder of the Royal Institute of International Affairs (RIIA), between September 1909 and March 1911, to indicate how Edwardian anxieties about the future of empire fuelled the missionary zeal of imperial enthusiasts, who placed enormous trust in the ‘scientific method’ to create a unified empire. This method and the same ideas were to become central features of the new discipline of IR. By highlighting the transnational circulation of these ideas, we also provide an alternative to the nationally-limited revisionist accounts.
format Journal Article
author Thakur, Vineet
author_facet Thakur, Vineet
Davis, Alexander E.
Vale, Peter
authorStr Thakur, Vineet
author_letter Thakur, Vineet
author2 Davis, Alexander E.
Vale, Peter
author2Str Davis, Alexander E.
Vale, Peter
title Imperial Mission, ‘Scientific’ Method: an Alternative Account of the Origins of IR
publisher Millennium Publishing Group
publishDate 2017
url https://eprints.soas.ac.uk/24078/