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Description

This episode of The IR thinker explores the role of identity and identification in international relations with Professor Richard Ned Lebow, examining how memory, self perception and corporate identity shape state behaviour and political order. The discussion engages with constructivist theory and its critics, considers non Western perspectives on identity, and reflects on the implications for conflict management and institutions such as the United Nations.

Richard Ned Lebow

Professor Richard Ned Lebow is Emeritus Professor of International Political Theory in the War Studies Department at King’s College London, Honorary Fellow of Pembroke College at the University of Cambridge, and a Fellow of the British Academy. His work spans international relations, the causes of war, decision making, conflict management and both ancient and modern political theory, with a particular focus on the politics and ethics of identity.

Publications:

National Identities and International Relations

A Cultural Theory of International Relations

The Politics and Ethics of Identity

Constructing Cause in International Relations

Content

00:00 - Introduction

02:23 - Unravelling Identity and Identification in International Relations

15:37 - The Nexus of Identification and State Behaviour

19:56 - The Significance of Understanding Identity

21:40 - Methodologies for Investigating Identity and Identification Concepts

22:54 - Perspectives on Identity in Non-Western Scholarship

26:31 - Memory, Identity, and Self-Perception

34:30 - States’ Collective Memory and Identity

36:24 - Corporate Identity in International Context

39:46 - Political Order: Interplay with Identity and Identification

48:03 - Ned Lebow’s Constructivist Insights and Critiques

52:42 - The UN and Constructivism’s Role in Conflict Resolution


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