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4 Eur. Rev. Int'l Stud. 5 (2017)

handle is hein.journals/epnrvwo4 and id is 1 raw text is: Articles

EUROCENTRISM, ETHNOCENTRISM, AND
MISERY OF POSITION: INTERNATIONAL
RELATIONS IN EUROPE - A PROBLEMATIC
OVERSIGHT*
Audrey Alejandro
London School of Economics and Political Science
Abstract: Since the 1980s, International Relations (IR) scholars have emphasised the 'geo-
epistemological' dynamics underpinning the global structuration of discipline diversity. By
focusing mainly on the study of 'American' and 'non-Western' IR, this debate has given little
attention to the voices, perspectives, and practices of those scholars who study IR in Europe.
This article aims reflexively to question the identity dynamics of the marginalisation of
European cases in the debate about diversity and hegemony in International Relations. Using
anthropological and sociological tools, such as the idea of 'misery of position' developed by
Pierre Bourdieu, it explores the postcolonial and eurocentric narratives that can explain this
situation, while also putting forward why assuming a balanced ethnocentric stance would
provide a more appropriate relational model to promote pluralism.
Keywords: eurocentrism; ethnocentrism; International Relations in Europe; sociology of
science; anthropology of science
This article takes as a starting point the marginality of works focusing on Europe in
the discussion of diversity and the circulation of knowledge in International Relations
(IR) globally. On the one hand, although American parochialism and eurocentrism
are described as the two main issues impeding the advent of a truly global IR, the
concrete manifestations of contemporary eurocentrism among European scholars
have been the focus of very little academic inquiry in comparison to the study of
American parochialism.1 On the other hand, although European scholars have made
*   I would like to thank Sebastian Schindler and AJR Groom for their useful comments on an earlier draft of this
article.
1   For the denunciation of American parochialism in IR see Daniel J. Levine and Alexander D. Barder, 'The
Closing of the American Mind: 'American School' International Relations and the State of Grand Theory',
European Journal oflnternationalRelations, Vol. 20, No. 4 (2014), pp. 863-88; Molly Cochran, 'What Does
It Mean to Be an American Social Science? A Pragmatist Case for Diversity', in D.S.L. Jarvis and R. Crawford
(eds.), International Relations-Still an American Social Science? : Toward Diversity in International Thought
(Albany, NY: State University of New York, 2001); Steve Smith, 'The United States and the Discipline of
International Relations: 'Hegemonic Country, Hegemonic Discipline', International Studies Review, Vol. 4,
No. 2 (2002), pp. 65-82; Thomas J. Biersteker, 'The Parochialism of Hegemony: Challenges for 'American'
Alejandro: Eurocentrism, Ethnocentrism, and Misery of Position, ERIS Vol. 4, Issue 1/2017, pp. 5-20

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