TY - JOUR
T1 - US Dominance and American Bias in International Relations Scholarship
T2 - A View from the Outside
AU - Goh, Evelyn
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2019 The Author(s). Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the International Studies Association.
PY - 2019/7/1
Y1 - 2019/7/1
N2 - This article responds to the Journal of Global Security Studies special issue on "American Perspectives and Blind Spots on World Politics,"edited by Jeff Colgan. It applauds their significant achievement in offering positivist demonstrations of the bias generated by American assumptions, coding, and preferences, and quantitative demonstration of the systemic and systematic impact of this bias in skewing key assumptions and theories in mainstream US international relations (IR), by selectivizing attention and compromising accuracy. The article pushes the envelope further by arguing that the call to arms is more urgent and more significant than Colgan et al. express. As US hegemony is diluted, the discipline of IR must increasingly account for other parts of the world. Here, cultural bias generates deeper problems with both ontology and epistemology. The article reviews the wider IR field that shows how IR is at once more global and less easily generalizable, driving the imperative to expand the universe of cases for qualitative research. It warns that the problem of US bias and the wider issue of insularity is accentuated by the growing distance between IR scholarship as expressed in top journal publications and "real-world"puzzles and empirical reality - and by ongoing changes in how governments provide state support and funding for IR research and training.
AB - This article responds to the Journal of Global Security Studies special issue on "American Perspectives and Blind Spots on World Politics,"edited by Jeff Colgan. It applauds their significant achievement in offering positivist demonstrations of the bias generated by American assumptions, coding, and preferences, and quantitative demonstration of the systemic and systematic impact of this bias in skewing key assumptions and theories in mainstream US international relations (IR), by selectivizing attention and compromising accuracy. The article pushes the envelope further by arguing that the call to arms is more urgent and more significant than Colgan et al. express. As US hegemony is diluted, the discipline of IR must increasingly account for other parts of the world. Here, cultural bias generates deeper problems with both ontology and epistemology. The article reviews the wider IR field that shows how IR is at once more global and less easily generalizable, driving the imperative to expand the universe of cases for qualitative research. It warns that the problem of US bias and the wider issue of insularity is accentuated by the growing distance between IR scholarship as expressed in top journal publications and "real-world"puzzles and empirical reality - and by ongoing changes in how governments provide state support and funding for IR research and training.
KW - United States
KW - bias
KW - hegemony
KW - international relations
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85107676702&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1093/jogss/ogz029
DO - 10.1093/jogss/ogz029
M3 - Article
SN - 2057-3170
VL - 4
SP - 402
EP - 410
JO - Journal of Global Security Studies
JF - Journal of Global Security Studies
IS - 3
ER -