Constructivism (international relations)
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In international relations, constructivism is the claim that significant aspects of international relations are historically and socially constructed, rather than inevitable consequences of human nature or other essential characteristics of world politics.
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Notable constructivists in international relations
- Emanuel Adler
- Anthony Clark Arend
- Michael Barnett
- Thomas J. Biersteker
- Didier Bigo
- Mark Blyth
- Jeffrey T. Checkel
- Martha Finnemore
- Ernst B. Haas
- Peter M. Haas
- Ian Hacking
- Rodney Bruce Hall
- Ted Hopf
- Peter J. Katzenstein
- Margaret Keck
- Judith Kelley
- Elizabeth Kier
- Friedrich Kratochwil
- Richard Ned Lebow
- Kathleen R. McNamara
- Daniel H. Nexon
- Nicholas Onuf
- Erik Ringmar
- Thomas Risse
- John Ruggie
- Chris Reus-Smit
- Edward Said
- Leonard Seabrooke
- Kathryn Sikkink
- J. Ann Tickner
- Ole Wæver
- Alexander Wendt
- Thomas G. Weiss
- Harry D. Gould
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See also
- Constructivist epistemology
- Constructivism in psychology
- English school of international relations theory
- International legal theories
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