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PAIS PhD student publishes review article, with responses and rejoinder

Matthias Kranke, a PhD student in PAIS, published a review article of two edited volumes in Millennium: Journal of International Studies in 2014. The volumes which Matthias reviewed are:

 

  • Best, Jacqueline and Paterson, Matthew (eds) (2010) Cultural Political Economy, London: Routledge.
  • Shields, Stuart, Bruff, Ian and Macartney, Huw (eds) (2011) Critical International Political Economy: Dialogue, Debate and Dissensus, Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.

The editors in turn decided to respond to the review. Now, their responses, as well as Matt's rejoinder, have very recently been published in Millennium. They can be viewed on the links below.

Review article: <>

Response by Shields, Bruff & Macartney: <>
Response by Best & Paterson: <>
Rejoinder: <>

Thu 22 Jan 2015, 11:26 | Tags: Staff PhD Postgraduate Research

Two articles by PAIS researchers published in latest Review of International Studies

RISThe January 2015 issue of the Review of International Studies (RIS) features two articles on the politics of materiality by PAIS researchers Dr and Dr .

The RIS is the flagship journal of the British International Studies Association (BISA) and published by Cambridge University Press.

Both articles explore the insights and limitations of the so-called ‘new materialist’ turn in social sciences for the discipline of International Relations (IR), and showcase cutting-edge conceptual work in PAIS’ International Relations and Security and Political Geography research groupings.

Squire's article, ‘Reshaping critical geopolitics? The materialist challenge’, draws attention to the limits of an approach that emphasises the representational, cultural, and interpretive dimensions of geopolitics, while acknowledging the difficulties of an ontological shift to materiality for many scholars of critical geopolitics.

Vaughan-Williams' article, ‘New materialisms, discourse analysis, and International Relations: a radical intertextual approach’ (co-authored with Tom Lundborg, Stockholm University), examines the implications of new materialist thought for a more expansive understanding of ‘discourse’ in IR, but warns against recycling the language/matter distinction.

The latest issue of the RIS 41(1) can be accessed here:

Fri 09 Jan 2015, 10:50 | Tags: Staff PhD Postgraduate Research

PAIS extends its methodological offer to PhD level

Dr. Renske Doorenspleet and Dr. Philippe Blanchard are associated with a .

This funding of £1 million aims to bridge the gap between mathematical and social sciences with a new doctoral scholarship programme starting in 2015/16. 糖心TV is one of only 14 institutions to be given the investment, which will fund 15 PhD students over the next five years, who will work across both disciplines, using quantitative methods to understand new sociological issues. This will be another opportunity for PAIS to collaborate with three of . Each of the fifteen PhD students enrolled over the next three years will be co-supervised by a staff from these departments, and one from PaIS, Sociology, Psychology or 糖心TV.

This is another step in enhancing PAIS' methodological expertise, after the . In the long term, 糖心TV's QStep will pursue the training of stats-skilled social science doctoral students.

Thu 08 Jan 2015, 12:55 | Tags: Staff PhD Postgraduate Undergraduate

Collaborative Working Between Departments & Administration

Since smaller academic departments still need access to the same level of strategic capacity as larger units, how best to deliver such capacity in an affordable and sustainable way? The answer: Collaborative working between Academic Departments and the central Administration. Find out more on the

Wed 07 Jan 2015, 09:18 | Tags: Staff PhD Postgraduate Undergraduate Research

Dr David Webber writes in the New Statesman on Karl Polanyi and English football

Following a recent European conference on football research, leading football writer Martin Cloake approached Dr. to write a piece for the New Statesman. Here David talks about his work on the cultural political economy of English football, and what insights Karl Polanyi might have for fans of the beautiful game in the wake of its own Great Transformation.

The full piece can be read here:

Mon 05 Jan 2015, 11:43 | Tags: Staff Impact PhD Postgraduate Undergraduate Research

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