TY - JOUR
T1 - Critical realism and causal analysis in international relations
AU - Kurki, Milja
N1 - Kurki, M. (2007). Critical realism and causal analysis in international relations. Millennium: Journal of International Studies, 35 (2), 361-378.
RAE2008
PY - 2007/3/1
Y1 - 2007/3/1
N2 - Drawing on the anti-positivist philosophy of science of Roy Bhaskar,
‘critical realism’1 has sought to challenge some of the core assumptions
theorists hold on the nature of explanation and science in IR theoretical
inquiry.2 One important area in which critical realists challenge
disciplinary conventions in IR is the issue of causal analysis. Causation
has been a contested notion in much of twentieth-century philosophy of
science and social science and, since the late 1980s, has also been debated
in International Relations, where the causal approach of the positivists
has come under increasing criticism from a selection of post-positivist
‘constitutive’ theorists. Critical realism seeks to reformulate currently
dominant understandings of the role and nature of causal analysis in the
social sciences and in IR. This short contribution to the forum focuses
on examining the critical realist intervention to the debates on causal
analysis in IR. Critical realism, it is argued, opens up important new
avenues in IR theorists’ and researchers’ conceptions of causal analysis:
avenues previously hidden from view by the dominance of a positivist
view of science in IR.
AB - Drawing on the anti-positivist philosophy of science of Roy Bhaskar,
‘critical realism’1 has sought to challenge some of the core assumptions
theorists hold on the nature of explanation and science in IR theoretical
inquiry.2 One important area in which critical realists challenge
disciplinary conventions in IR is the issue of causal analysis. Causation
has been a contested notion in much of twentieth-century philosophy of
science and social science and, since the late 1980s, has also been debated
in International Relations, where the causal approach of the positivists
has come under increasing criticism from a selection of post-positivist
‘constitutive’ theorists. Critical realism seeks to reformulate currently
dominant understandings of the role and nature of causal analysis in the
social sciences and in IR. This short contribution to the forum focuses
on examining the critical realist intervention to the debates on causal
analysis in IR. Critical realism, it is argued, opens up important new
avenues in IR theorists’ and researchers’ conceptions of causal analysis:
avenues previously hidden from view by the dominance of a positivist
view of science in IR.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=34249815245&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1177/03058298070350021501
DO - 10.1177/03058298070350021501
M3 - Article
SN - 0305-8298
VL - 35
SP - 361
EP - 378
JO - Millennium: Journal of International Studies
JF - Millennium: Journal of International Studies
IS - 2
ER -