Abstract
The call for a ‘global’ and ‘post-Western’ international relations (IR) discipline is rightly gathering momentum, yet arguably this research agenda contains presumptions as to the absence of a historical tradition of IR thinking in places such as India. Turning attention to marginalized histories of Indian IR, this commentary on the global IR debate offers a historical corrective to these presumptions and calls for greater attention to extra-European disciplinary histories. In so doing, important patterns of co-constitution reveal the connected histories of disciplinary development that challenge the analytical categories that often characterize the global IR and post-Western IR literature. A more historicized global IR debate offers a fruitful research agenda that explores the multiple connected beginnings of IR as a global discipline responsive to a variety of intellectual lineages, encompassing a variety of political purposes and revealing entanglements of imperial and anti-imperial knowledge.
Introduction: The Perennial Yet Perilous Call for a ‘Non-Western’ IR
What are the conditions that allow us to speak of ‘non-Western’, ‘post-Western’ or ‘global’ international relations (IR)? If we take the conventional narrative, the ‘rise’ of non-West compels us to pay attention to alternative visions of world order. As Amitav Acharya puts it, IR must become more ‘global’ in recognition of the ‘increasingly global distribution of its subjects’, and the ‘schools, departments institutes, and conventions’ that ‘have mushroomed around the world’ (2014, pp. 649, 647). The narration of disciplinary history here is also clear. IR is a discipline born and raised in and for the West, but has diffused to the non-West to a greater or lesser degree requiring it to bring these alternative patterns of thought into the fold if it wishes to remain relevant.
This critique of Western centrism and a search for disciplinary alternatives are well-worn paths. As early as 1968, Abdul Said contributed to an edited volume featuring (among others) Karl Deutsch, Hans J. Morgenthau and Kenneth Thompson. Writing on ‘The Impact of the Emergence of the Non-West Upon Theories of International Relations’, Said lamented the ‘unconsciously applied normative definitions’ and ‘value-laden’ concepts such as ‘democracy’ and ‘political development’ that defined contemporary political science and IR. This ‘New Scientism’, he argued, rendered the study of IR deeply ‘culture bound’, ‘coloured by the American experience’ and relying ‘overly on extrapolation from American norms’ (Said, 1968, p. 100). Stanley Hoffmann’s rather more celebrated article, published almost a decade later, in many ways repeated this argument, adding (although often overlooked), that IR should turn away from the concerns of a US superpower, towards those of the ‘weak and the revolutionary’ (1977, p. 59). Kalevi Holsti took up the theme in the mid-1980s, seeking to ascertain the international spread of core disciplinary paradigms and theories (1985). The 1990s also witnessed examples that foreshadowed the renaissance of ‘non-Western’ IR in the mid-2000s (Chan, 1994; Waever, 1998).
These periodic debates over the reach and vitality of the discipline have reinforced the notion that IR exists as a Eurocentric discipline with a bias against the ‘non-West’, and the evidence seems clear. ‘Mainstream’ IR continues to view the non-West as a site for ‘cameras’ rather than ‘thinkers’ (Acharya, 2014, p. 648). The structural inhibitors to non-Western IR have also been quantified. Waever’s 1998 study of IR journals as ‘the most direct measure of the discipline itself’ (p. 697) highlighted the fact that in the four leading North American IR journals over the period 1970–1995, North Americans accounted for 88.1% of article authorship. Amongst European journals, the figure was closer to 40%, with another 40% being European authors, and the remainder from the rest of the world. Throughout this period, three of the four leading American journals had failed to publish any articles written by a scholar from outside of Europe or North America. 2 It has been shown how the conceptual and intellectual histories of core disciplinary categories remain beholden to European histories and forms of knowledge (Hobson, 2012). Finally, the progeny of disciplinary histories, even at their more expansive, continues to focus on European and North American figureheads and institutions. The grand irony of ‘International’ Relations, then, is indeed that it is ‘international’ only in subject matter and name (Crawford, 2001, p. 1). This underscores the argument, made by Acharya and others, that Western IR exerts a hegemonic power over non-Western IR, particularly non-Western IR theory. 3
As critics have pointed out, however, this diagnosis and the antidote of ‘non-Western’ IR that results potentially raises as many concerns as it addresses (Agathangelou & Ling, 2004; Bilgin, 2008; 2016; Shani, 2008; Shilliam, 2011; Tickner, 2013; Tickner & Waever, 2009). The implied spatiality within this disciplinary geography reinforces the notion of the West as the ‘centre of calculation’ (Tickner, 2013). As Behera (2007) points out, identifying non-Western IR, therefore, becomes a process of searching for equivalents or derivatives, thus restricting the search to one of mimicry or emulation. Global IR is in danger of reinforcing its ‘self’ through the search for disciplinary ‘others’. The boundary policing surrounding ‘legitimate knowledge’ that is evident in parts of the literature demonstrates the dangers associated with this, where ‘non-Western IR’ and IR theory only qualifies if it achieves certain criteria that reflect ‘Western’ standards of knowledge (Shilliam, 2011). As such, a (neo)colonial narrative of ‘core’ and ‘periphery’ is maintained, along with familiar hierarchies of knowledge: theoretical/atheoretical; scholarly/utilitarian; universalist/particularist.
The reverse of this is a more critical retreat wherein non-Western IR becomes a project that deliberately evades ‘Western’ epistemic and ontological traditions. This search for pristine ‘indigenous’ traditions of knowledge can, in extreme cases, resemble a process of ‘self-orientalism’ (Dirlik, 1996) or methodological nationalism that potentially leaves ‘non-Western IR’ open to the same critiques of ethnocentricity that gave rise to its pursuit in the first place. Furthermore, this pursuit of the pristine frequently overlooks the intimate connection between the archives of ‘non-Western’ knowledge, and projects of empire and colonial rule. Very often such knowledge was recovered and ordered through global encounters brought about by imperial relations (Jahn, 2017; Shilliam, 2011). In short, conventional global IR approaches, and more critical alternatives, both lead to intractable positions over the ‘purity’ and purpose of disciplinary knowledge (Barnett & Zarakol, 2023). The indispensable yet inadequate corpus of ‘Western IR’ is faced with the unavoidable but perilous intellectual terrain of the non-West (Chakrabarty, 2008; Shilliam, 2011).
What is missing, at least in any substantial form, within both of these accounts are detailed intellectual histories of non-Western international thought. Whilst postcolonial studies and increasingly intellectual historians have occupied the ‘terrain’ of non-Western international thought for some time now, rarely have these histories been placed in dialogue with the genesis of what might be loosely termed ‘thinking the international’. Whilst IR has generally been poor at investigating its own disciplinary history—it has been woefully inadequate when it comes to investigating the non-Western histories of the discipline (Bilgin, 2016; Shilliam, 2011). Yet attention to these histories reveals important insights. First, rather than delineating ‘Western’ and ‘non-Western’ approaches, attention to non-Western or ‘Asian’ histories of IR and international thought reveals the problematic nature of such a division demonstrating important patterns of co-constitution, dialogue and resistance (Bayly, 2023b; Bisht 2019; Boseman, 1994; Liebig & Mishra, 2017). 4 Second, to the extent that we can speak of local or regional patterns of international thought and disciplinary IR, critiques of empire and existing patterns of world order are shown to play a formative role in the origins of South Asian international thought in particular. This further highlights the co-implication of ‘Western’ and ‘non-Western’ IR. Third, attention to the political motivations of these early disciplinary endeavours, which often drew upon ‘indigenous’ patterns of thought and practice, introduces a note of caution into the attempt to draw upon ‘cultural resources’ as a means of staking out a more contemporary ‘Asian IR’. In what remains of this short contribution, I will draw upon the example of early international studies in late colonial India as a means of highlighting how a greater degree of (disciplinary) historical literacy helps to reformulate the global IR debate in a more progressive manner.
The Hidden Histories of ‘Non-Western’ IR in India
Stanley Hoffmann’s 1977 article may have found IR to be ‘an American social science’, but that was only in the limited terms with which he described IR, as a ‘non-utopian’, empiricist pursuit of questions of war and peace. At the time his paper was published, political science departments were operating across the globe, in South America, South Africa, South Asia and East Asia. The Chinese
Yet it is also a mistake to focus solely on academic, formal scholarly institutions as a means of detecting disciplinary presence. Indian scholars such as the Bengali Sociologist, Benoy Kumar Sarkar, were publishing on the ‘Hindu Theory of International Relations’ in the
Early communities of Indian political science, therefore, resonated with anti-imperial critiques. As the opening speaker at the 1938 Indian Political Science Association conference in Benaras (Varanasi) argued, ‘science’ (including political science) had become a ‘monstrous engine of oppression’ and that ‘throwing into the Ganges … many of the text books on political science … will lay the foundation of a real working basis for political realization’ (Pant, 1939). Yet in pursuing this counter-hegemonic agenda, Indian international studies also elicited alternative themes, histories and concepts, thereby stretching the historical ontology of the ‘international’, often within forums beyond the academy. Founded in 1943, the Indian Council on World Affairs (ICWA), for instance, provided India’s first international affairs think tank, one which, according to its own founding principles, provided an ‘unofficial and non-political body … to encourage and facilitate the scientific study of Indian and International questions’ (Contents, 1945, p. 1). The membership of ICWA cut across the sites of academia, government and civil society. Its founding members, for instance, Prakash Narain Sapru and Hridya Nath Kunzru, held connections with independence movements, including the educationalist movement, Servants of India Society, hence their formative role in the establishing of the Indian School of International Studies now at Delhi’s Jawaharlal Nehru University (Rajan, 1978). However, the topics that fell under the ICWA’s remit went beyond conventional matters of diplomacy and foreign policy, incorporating subjects such as the status of the Indian diaspora and processes of state formation underway in Burma and China. A regular section on ‘Indians Overseas’ tracked the long-standing issue of the treatment of the Indian diaspora in colonial territories and beyond, where, as the section editor put it, ‘economic competition and racial juxtaposition among the Indian, native and European communities, coupled with the political domination of a small racial minority … resulted in numerous humiliating restrictions on their civic and political rights’ (Kondapi, 1945, p. 71). The treatment of these communities, and the questions this raised over political representation, citizenship and rights, had been a prominent feature of the independence campaign. Now, as India moved towards independence, new debates emerged over the repatriation of these peoples, and their new status as Indian citizens, sometimes within other decolonizing states.
Yet it was the ICWA’s involvement in the 1947 Asian Relations Conference that perhaps best showcased the emancipatory visions that pre-independence international thought in India offered (Thakur, 2019). Delegates invited to the conference were asked to prepare submissions on such themes as ‘national movements for freedom in Asia’; ‘racial problems with special reference to racial conflicts’; ‘inter-Asian migration and the status and treatment of immigrants’, and added to the final conference themes were considerations of ‘women’s problems’.
6
Conference debates on these topics showed that shared experiences of colonialism provided common foreign policy priorities that linked regional states together through shared experiences of enduring imperial hierarchies. For instance, a consensus that ‘non-indigenous minorities’—including labour communities from overseas countries—should be afforded fair treatment served to circumvent the tensions that decolonization prompted, as reflected in the Indians Overseas section of
Conclusion: Towards a Global Disciplinary History
These histories of non-Western international thought and practice, thus, hold important insights not only for the chronologies of disciplinary development but also for the ontologies of the international too. The ‘first here then elsewhere’ logic of diffusion that inflects so much of the conventional global IR literature obscures these alternatives, and trades in the ‘denial of coevalness’ that Chakrabarty (2008, p. 7) identifies as central to the European historicist tradition. Disciplinary trends within IR did not emerge in one location and disseminate elsewhere, but rather were multiply realized as part of a global project of thinking the international, one that transcended simple binaries of ‘West’ and ‘non-West.’ The origins of international thought in India, therefore, resonated with disciplinary practices elsewhere, but crucially they, were present at the same time that IR began to emerge in the ‘West.’
In addition to these indicators of more modern disciplinary origins, these histories also give empirical form then to the deeper relationship that IR has with imperialism and colonialism, that some critical global IR and post-Western IR scholars have begun to explore (Davis et al., 2020; Inayatullah & Blaney, 2014; Sabaratnam, 2011; Shani, 2008; Shilliam, 2011). As a discipline that was forged in the pursuit of useful knowledge for empire, IR was necessarily ‘global’ at birth (Bayly, 2023b), and as a consequence, patterns of thought and practice tied together metropole and colony in a deeply social relational whole (Buzan & Lawson, 2015; Steinmetz, 2016). Patterns of origin and destination are less important than the basic insight on the co-constitution of multiple political traditions, some developed and propounded by empire, some cultivated in resistance to it, and some best conceived beyond this dualism. An example of this can be found in the forms of knowledge that emerged in the learned societies of late colonial India demonstrating how comparative traditions so foundational to the modern social sciences were a product of global interactions between scholarly communities in Europe and elsewhere (Burke, 2012, loc 1774). The comparative approach adopted by philology, for instance, in the Asiatic Societies of Bengal and elsewhere relied upon engagements and dialogues with extra-European intellectual movements such as those drawn from the Bengal renaissance. These productive relationships, always beset by patterns of inequality, subjugation and exploitation, nonetheless forged new archives of ‘colonial knowledge’ that informed later articulations of place, space and selfhood in South Asia—whether this was in the subliminal adoption of ideas of race, or other forms of social hierarchy, or in the deliberate rejection of these practices. To return to Benoy Kumar Sarkar (1919b), the project of emancipation that informed his notion of the ‘Hindu Theory of International Relations’ was rooted in the traditions of the
Attention to the histories of non-Western international studies, therefore, complicates the ‘doubtful particularisms’ that often inform contemporary debates over global IR (Agnew, 2007, p. 138). This includes the ideas of ‘West’ and ‘non-West’, revealing the two are implicated in each other, being produced through time and across multiple transnational links. Historicizing global IR allows a conversation that goes beyond one that is governed by sameness and difference (Hutchings, 2011, p. 645), instead enquiring into the deep histories of connectivity that allowed social science as a product of imperial and colonial encounters to emerge in the first place.
Attention to the histories of Indian IR also offers lessons on contemporary questions over the usefulness of IR to present policy debates. This includes the question of how IR can better reflect a world of rising and risen great powers no longer dominated by Western states. Although it is tempting to suggest that knowledge traditions emanating from these regions are more suited to understanding the visions of world order through which these ascendant powers operate, attention to the histories of disciplinary knowledge in countries such as India cautions us against the inadvertent reactivation of a colonial archive in pursuit of an emancipated social science. As these extra-European disciplinary histories show, ‘Indian’ IR was perpetually entangled in complex relationships of assimilation, mimicry and resistance with multiple knowledge complexes elsewhere.
That said, we can also identify in the nascent study of world affairs from the Indian perspective a suite of empirical and theoretical concerns that animate contemporary debates on (for example) migration, race, inequality and indeed the politics of knowledge production. The observation that contemporary Indian IR has become dominated by realism, with a subordinate role for critical and Marxist approaches (Behera, 2009; Wemheuer-Vogelaar, 2016), underscores the close relationship between India’s world role and the forms of knowledge produced within its IR traditions with the dominance of realism reflecting the need for applied knowledge in the pursuit of Indian foreign policy objectives. As India’s role in multilateral fora, and as its globally dispersed population continues to shape its foreign policy in prominent ways, these histories of early Indian international studies will come once again to the fore.
Nonetheless, an awareness of the histories of different forms of knowledge that contribute to contemporary ‘non-Western’ IR alerts us to the pitfalls of recovering this knowledge in an uncritical manner. Global IR should encourage awareness of global history, global intellectual history and global disciplinary history, if it is to avoid merely restating the hierarchies of knowledge that prompted its emergence in the first place.
Footnotes
Declaration of Conflicting Interests
The author declared no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship and/or publication of this article.
Funding
The author disclosed receipt of the following financial support for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article: The research that contributed to this article was funded by a British Academy Postdoctoral Fellowship Award.
