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International Relations in Southeast Asia
The series will publish works on theory, research and critical views on the state of theorizing, researching, studying and applying the concept of the ‘international’ in Southeast Asia by prominent, emerging and novice scholars. It highly welcomes works that forges a link between disciplinary IR’s theoretical richness and area study of Southeast Asia’s empirical application, e.g. field research. The series promotes an exploration of the emergence and hybridity of Southeast Asian theories, praxes, methods, and approaches to IR, including a survey of the richness of the very idea of the ‘international’ in terms of historical and recent flow of people, goods, and ideas contributing to the creation of regions and region-ness. In light of the development of alternate cosmologies and emergence of Asian IR, this series encourages interdisciplinarity and eclectic contributions from both scholars and practitioners to facilitate a holistic approach towards the study of IR in the region.
This is the flagship series of the Philippine International Studies Organization (www.phiso.org). There are three categories or types of works that represent IR in the region and are offered by the series: (1) Theories and Methodologies, (2) Praxes and Applications, and (3) Thematic Issues and Trends. The first category includes works that explore, discover and innovate methods in attaining new theories or theoretical engagement with Western IR. The second type mostly concentrates on critical approaches to the academic structure of IR establishment in the region as well as studies on traditional and human security. The last, but not the least, is contemporary issues and trends affecting the whole region and its relatedness to other regional worlds. Book proposals may encompass a wide range of issues and themes, including but not limited to the following:
(1) Theories and Methodologies
- Sociological IR
- Philosophy and IR
- Nationalism and IR
- Methodological issues in IR
- International Political Theory
- Historicism and Behavioralism
- Nationalist thinkers (Rizal et al)
- End of IR theory (EJIR special)
- Normative international thought
- Rationality, reflexivity, or relationality
- Contributions of the Humanities to IR
- Relations between Area Studies and IR
- Gap between Theory and Practice in IR
- Regions, regionalization and regionalism
- Indigenous theorizing; homegrown theorizing
- Alternate ontologies and epistemologies of IR
- Pre-modern, Modernity, or modern IR thoughts
- Multiplexity; multiculturality; civilizational plurality
- Historical, cultural, linguistic and visual turns in IR
- Trust, morality, and ethics in International Relations
- Positivist, non-positivist, or post-positivist approaches
- Textuality, Spatiality, Temporality in theory and research
- Colonial, neocolonial, postcolonial, or decolonial thinking
- Western IR; post-Western IR; non-Western IR; Global IR
- The religious-secular domains/binary of the 'international'
- Ontological power (real politik); ontology of societal multiplicity
- Borders, Frontier, Borderland, Borderlessness and Border Thinking
- Feminism, Queer theory, Gender and Sexuality in IR in Southeast Asia
- Disciplinary boundaries between International Relations and Political Science
(2) Praxes and Applications
- Scholarship in IR
- Development Studies in IR
- Culture and the praxis of IR
- Education and Pedagogy in IR
- International Political Economy
- Diplomacy and Foreign Service
- International financial implications
- Consular practices in Southeast Asia
- International Law and legal implications
- Relevant policy-making implications of IR
- Configuration of IR Academia in Southeast Asia
- Structural issues and gatekeeping in the discipline
(3) Thematic Issues and Trends
- Religion and IR
- Maritime piracy
- Democratization
- Migration and IR
- Aesthetics and IR
- Human trafficking
- Global health in IR
- Geography and IR
- Development and IR
- Politics of memory in IR
- Water and food security
- Peace, War, and Conflict
- Authoritarianism and populism
- Minorities and Substate Actors
- Geopolitics and maritime disputes
- Security and non-traditional Security
- Radicalism, extremism and terrorism
- Domestic and transnational civil society
- Climate change and environment in IR
- Small arms manufacturing and smuggling
- Human rights challenges in Southeast Asia
- Pre-modern faiths, modern religions and rituals in IR
- International Organizations, Multinational Corporations and transnational actors
Submission:
Please email your inquiries, short idea/concept note for new proposals, or full-blown book proposals to Dr. Nassef Manabilang Adiong, Chief Editor, info@nassef-m-adiong.com, and include carbon copies to:
- Assoc. Prof. Dr. Alan Chong, Editor, iscschong@ntu.edu.sg
- Dr. Rommel A. Curaming, Editor, rommel.curaming@ubd.edu.bn
- Prof. Dr. Aigul Kulnazarova, Editor, kulnazarova@tama.ac.jp
To download the correct type of book proposal form, click https://www.routledge.com/resources/authors/how-to-publish-with-us. All book proposals must include the following:
- The proposed title of the book.
- A description of the book (between 400 and 700 words) that explains its rationale, scope, significance to the series, its relations to competing works, and notable contribution to existing scholarship.
- A table of contents with chapter summaries.
- Estimated word length for the whole book, its proposed completion date, and description of its target readership.
- Optional: one or two sample chapters.
- Complete curriculum vitae of the author(s).
Advisory/Editorial Board Members:
Adam Simpson, University of South Australia, Australia
Amitav Acharya, American University, USA
Amy L. Freedman, Columbia University, USA
Ann Marie Murphy, Seton Hall University, USA
Anthony Milner, Australian National University, Australia
Archill Niña Faller-Capistrano, University of the Philippines Cebu, Philippines
Catherine Goetze, University of Tasmania, Australia
Christopher K. Lamont, University of Groningen, the Netherlands
Clarita R. Carlos, University of the Philippines-Diliman
Darryl S.L. Jarvis, The Education University of Hong Kong, China
David Shim, University of Groningen, the Netherlands
Erickson D. Calata, Polytechnic University of the Philippines
Frances Antoinette Cruz, University of the Philippines-Diliman
George Lawson, London School of Economics & Political Science, UK
Henelito A. Sevilla, Jr., University of the Philippines-Diliman
I Gede Wahyu Wicaksana, Airlangga University, Indonesia
James Ockey, University of Canterbury, New Zealand
Jivanta Schoettli, National University of Singapore
John Harvey D. Gamas, Ateneo de Davao University, Philippines
Jonathan T. Chow, University of Macau, China
Jürgen Haacke, London School of Economics & Political Science, UK
K S Balakrishnan, University of Malaya, Malaysia
Kelly M. Kadera, University of Iowa, USA
Kerstin Steiner, La Trobe University, Australia
Kitti Prasirtsuk, Thammasat University, Thailand
Kosal Path, City University of New York, USA
Kumiko Haba, Aoyama Gakuin University, Japan
Mietek P. Boduszynski, Pomona College, USA
Narayanan Ganesan, Hiroshima City University, Japan
Pauline Eadie, University of Nottingham, UK
Pavin Chachavalpongpun, Kyoto University, Japan
Rikard Jalkebro, University of St. Andrews, UK
Salvador Santino F. Regilme Jr., University of Leiden, the Netherlands
Shine Choi, Massey University, New Zealand
Siew Mun Tang, ISEAS-Yusof Ishak Institute, Singapore
Sorpong Peou, Ryerson University, Canada
Temario C. Rivera, University of the Philippines-Diliman
Thitinan Pongsudhirak, Chulalongkorn University, Thailand
Titus C. Chen, National Sun Yat-sen University, Taiwan
Yoon Hwan Shin, Sogang University, South Korea