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Identity, Ideology and Worldviews in Global Politics
The series aims to publish innovative theoretical and empirical scholarship exploring the role of systems of belonging and meaning in global politics. It adopts a broad interpretation of identity, ideology, and worldviews to include a wide range of interrelated ideational factors and forces in international relations, such as culture, discourses, language, narratives, norms, values, beliefs, knowledge, and epistemes.
- Empirically the series is open to submissions with a substantive and critical focus on any system of belonging and meaning. These may include, but are not limited to, race(ism), gender, national(ism), civilizational, communitarian, global, religious, secular, scientific, extremist, reactionary, revolutionary, progressive, liberal/illiberal, democratic/authoritarian, and utopic/dystopic.
- The series also welcomes submissions focused primarily on theory, including investigations into the relationship between ideational factors and power, institutions, practices, networks, technology, boundaries, emotions, and any other relevant aspect of international relations.
- Thematically the series is broad, addressing any major area of global politics such as peace and security, transnational social movements, foreign policy, international order, and global governance.
The series aims to be global in orientation and philosophically, theoretically, and methodologically pluralist.
Series Editors: Gregorio Bettiza, Stephane Baele, Beverley Loke