Concepedia

Abstract

A challenger to the continuing dominance of neorealism and neoliberal institutionalism in the study of international relations in the United States, constructivism is regarded with a great deal of skepticism by mainstream scholars.1 While the reasons for this reception are many, three central ones are the mainstream's miscasting of constructivism as necessarily postmodern and antipositivist; constructivism's own ambivalence about whether it can buy into mainstream social science methods without sacrificing its theoretical distinctiveness; and, related to this ambivalence, constructivism's failure to advance an alternative research program. In this article, I clarify constructivism's claims, outline the differences between conventional and critical constructivism, and suggest a research agenda that both provides alternative understandings of mainstream interna-

References

YearCitations

1980

6.4K

1992

5.6K

1983

4.2K

1972

3K

1981

2.8K

1994

2.6K

1978

2.1K

1993

1.7K

1987

1.4K

1997

1.4K

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