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A contextual approach to decolonising IR: Interrogating knowledge production hierarchies

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posted on 2025-08-02, 12:34 authored by B Loke, C Owen
Although calls to decolonise International Relations (IR) have become more prominent, the endeavour becomes infinitely more complex when searching for concrete approaches to decolonise IR knowledge production. We posit that decolonising IR, a global counter-hegemonic political project to dismantle and transform dominant knowledge production practices, must be enacted according to context-specific particularities. Contexts shape practices of epistemological decolonisation, since knowledge hierarchies are enacted and experienced – and must be challenged and dismantled – differently in different sites. Yet although acknowledged as important, contexts are understudied and under-theorised. This raises several questions: how do contexts matter to IR knowledge production, in what ways, and with what effects? This article disaggregates six contexts in IR knowledge production – material, spatial, disciplinary, political, embodied, and temporal – and explores how they impact academic practices. We bring together hitherto-disparate insights into the role of contexts in knowledge production from Global IR, Political Sociology, Feminist Studies, Higher Education Studies, and Critical Geopolitics, illustrating them with empirical evidence from 30 interviews with IR scholars across a variety of countries and academic institutions. We argue that an interrogation of the inequalities produced through these contexts brings us closer towards developing concrete tools to dismantle entrenched hierarchies in IR knowledge production.

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© The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of The British International Studies Association. This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.

Submission date

2023-08-03

Notes

This is the final version. Available on open access from Cambridge University Press via the DOI in this record Data Availability: The research data supporting this publication are not publicly available due to ethical concerns

Journal

Review of International Studies

Publisher

Cambridge University Press / The British International Studies Association

Version

  • Version of Record

Language

en

FCD date

2024-08-19T13:00:13Z

FOA date

2024-10-10T14:50:32Z

Citation

Published online 7 October 2024

Department

  • Humanities and Social Sciences, Cornwall

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