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The Social Construction of Conflict and Reconciliation in the Former Yugoslavia
THE END OF THE COLD WAR IN ROUGHLY 1989 TO 1990 -- AND MORE PARTICUlarly, the failure of international relations (IR) theorists, scholars, and practitioners to (even vaguely) see it coming -- brought to center stage an epistemological and ontological debate about practically everything that has ever been said and done in the name of "international relations." Everything about "IR" became contestable: international relations was recast as world politics; states and state systems became political communities (or not); political discourse became speech acts; war became conflict or violence; theory became epistemology; and boundaries -- inside/outside -- whether cognitive, geographic, or disciplinary, were decloaked as binary categories of socially constructed space.
The ensuing debates have dragged political science, Western philosophy, and social theory into the fray, and provoked fresh interest in the old, but unsettled debate about the limitations inherent in grafting the methodology and epistemology of the physical sciences onto the conduct of social inquiry. While Edward O. Wilson (1998) argues that all social and physical sciences can be assimilated within a bioscience paradigm, Henry L. Hamman and Amit Goswami (1998) claim a convergence between quantum physics and social constructivism. These are exciting times to be thinking about international relations.
Before the post-structuralist, postmodernist, social constructivist critique of IR, 1 the state was always just there; power was always there; interests were always just there. Research questions focused on institutional and structural relationships given the state, power, and interests. Post-structuralism and social constructivism share credit for redirecting our inquiry to questions of how the state got there; how does the way in which we think about power "make it so," as Jean-Luc Picard would say; and how are interests socially constructed? These do not exhaust the questions raised by ongoing epistemological debates, but it seems to me they are at the core. Questions about the role of norms, normative consensus, identity, boundaries, the construction of the self (rather than the "nature of man"), civil society, uncivil behavior, the role of culture and historicity, and more flow from the contestation of these foundational concepts -- the state, power, and interests (see Ruggie, 1998; Kratochwil, 1989; Lapid and Kratochwil, 1997; Katzenstein, 1996; Neumann and Waever, 1997).