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Full Description
This is the first book to apply the concept of good international citizenship to the international relations of the Global South. The edited book introduces good international citizenship as a theoretical framework for analysing a diversity of agencies across the Global South. It covers different cases of non-Western states, global governance, foreign policy, and international law, and examines how non-Western actors enact ideas of good international citizenship to engage and shape the global order. The book shows how good international citizenship is not limited to Western notions of liberal internationalism but also encompasses the efforts of non-Western actors to promote distinct approaches to ethics, morality, responsibility, and leadership. The book contributes theoretically and empirically to the field of non-Western International Relations. It allows for rethinking established International Relations concepts so that these become more inclusive to the histories and experiences of different actors across the globe.
Contents
1.Good International Citizenship and Non-Western International Relations: A Research Agenda, Charalampos Efstathopoulos and Hakan Mehmetcik.- 2.The Underlying Dimensions of Good International Citizenship and How They Vary across Western and Non-Western Powers, Hakan Mehmetcik.- 3.Beyond West vs Non-West: A Critique of Global IR Perspective on Good International Citizenship, Sinan Chu.- 4.Good International Citizenship and the Problem of Instrumentalization of Norms, İsmail Yaylacı.- 5.Re-constructing the Self Internationally: Global IR, Global Consciousness and the Emancipatory Potential of Good International Citizenship, Toygun Karahasanoğlu.- 6.Middle Powers and Good International Citizenship: The Resilience of Brazil's Foreign Policy, Charalampos Efstathopoulos.- 7.Emerging Middle Powers as Norm Followers or Norm Subsidiaries? A Global IR Perspective on Turkish and Korean International Citizenship in Global Governance, Gonca Oğuz Gök & Wongeon Kim.- 8.Good International Citizenship and Individual Responsibility to Protect, Pınar Gözen Ercan.- 9.Reconsidering the Refugee Regime and Third World Approaches to International Law, Selin Kul.- 10.Ottoman Contributions to the Emergence of Good International Citizenship: A Historical Account, Ali Murat Kurşun Good International Citizenship and the Changing Global Order, Charalampos Efstathopoulos and Hakan Mehmetcik