Explores methods and concepts of political anthropology and explains how they can be used for the analysis of international relations and internationalized politics.
1. Introduction: The Political Anthropology of Internationalized Politics, Sarah Biecker and Klaus Schlichte
Part I: New Vantage Points
2. Conducting Field Research When There is No ‘Field’: Some Notes on the Praxiographic Challenge, Christian Bueger
3. The Possibilities and Limits of Ethnography: From Syria and Jordan, Sophia Hoffmann
4. Zooming in Dissolves the Taken-For-Granted: Towards a Political Anthropology of International Organisations, Julian Eckl
Part II: Local Arenas of Internationalized Politics
5. Emic Security: An Anthropological Approach to Security, Tessa Diphoorn
6. Dynamic Security and the Scientific Exotic – Vernacularisation and Practical Norms in Ugandan Prisons, Tomas Martin
7. The Value of ‘Staying Put’ For the Study of International Peacebuilding:Insights from Somaliland, Jessica L. Anderson
Part III: Catching How the World is Ruled
8. Depending on Money: Kenya’s International Relations, Kai Koddenbrock
9. Bureaucratic Technologies of Government and the Study of Internation
Produktdetaljer
Biografisk notat
Sarah Beicker is a Research Assistant at the Institute for Intercultural and International Studies (InIIS) at the University of Bremen.
Klaus Schlichte is a Professor of International Relations and World Society at the University of Bremen.