Part 01: The Inward Gaze: Introductory Reflections
Andreas Gofas, Inanna Hamati-Ataya, and Nicholas Onuf
Chapter 1: The struggle for the soul of International Relations: Fragments of a collective journey
Inanna Hamati-Ataya
Chapter 2: Crafting the reflexive gaze: Knowledge of knowledge in the social worlds of International Relations
Part 02: Imagining the International, Acknowledging the Global
Jens Bartelson
Chapter 3: From the international to the global?
Himadepp Muppidi
Chapter 4: Coloring the global: Race, colonialism and internationalism
David L. Blaney and Naeem Inayatullah
Chapter 5: Liberal International Political Economy as colonial science
George Lawson
Chapter 6: International Relations as a historical social science
Jacqui True and Sarah Hewitt
Chapter 7: International Relations and the gendered international
Mustapha Kamal Pasha
Chapter 8: Beyond the 'religious turn': International Relations as political theology
Zeynep Gülsah Çapan and Ayse Zarakol
Chapter 9: Between 'East' and 'West': Travelling theories, travelling imaginations
L.H.M. Ling and Boyu Chen
Chapter 10: International Relations and the rise of Asia : A new 'moral imagination' for world politics?
Victoria Tin-bor Hui
Chapter 11: Confucian pacifism or Confucian confusion?
Evgeny Roshchin
Chapter 12: The challenges of 'contextualism'
Richard Ned Lebow
Chapter 13: Imagining International Relations through alternative worlds
Part 03: The Search for (an) Identity
Torbjørn L. Knutsen
Chapter 14: The origins of International Relations: Idealists, administrators and the institutionalization of a new science
Jeremy Youde and Brent J. Steele
Chapter 15: Canon fodder: The founding fathers, classics, and 'isms' of International Relations
Halvard Leira and Benjamin de Carvalho
Chapter 16: The function of myths in International Relations: Discipline and identity
Peter Marcus Kristensen and Yongjin Zhang
Chapter 17: Identity and theory: Towards sociological explanations of 'schools' in International Relations
Patrick James and Randall J. Jones Jr.
Chapter 18: International Relations' crystal ball: Prediction and forecasting
Nicholas Michelsen
Chapter 19: The problem of social utility International Relations and the 'policy gap'
Colin Wight
Chapter 20: A fear of foundations?
Daniel J. Levine and Alexander D. Barder
Chapter 21: After first principles: The sociological turn in International Relations as disciplinary crisis
Tanja Aalberts
Chapter 22: International Relations and the challenges of interdisciplinarity
Patrick Thaddeus Jackson
Chapter 23: 'Does it matter if it's a discipline?' bawled the child
Part 04: International Relations as a Profession
Arlene B. Tickner
Chapter 24: The unequal profession
Christian Bueger and Frank Gadinger
Chapter 25: From community to practice: International Relations as a practical configuration
Thomas Volgy
Chapter 26: Rule by referees? The curious world of academic judgment
Anna Leander
Chapter 27: International Relations expertise at the interstices of fields and assemblages
Ido Oren
Chapter 28: International Relations ideas as reflections and weapons of US foreign policy
David Grondin and Anne-Marie D'Aoust
Chapter 29: For as undisciplined take on International Relations: The politics of situated scholarship
Jonas Hagmann and Thomas Biersteker
Chapter 30: Counter-mapping the discipline: The archipelagos of Western International Relations teaching
Felix Berenskoetter
Chapter 31: E Pluribus Unum? How textbooks cover theories
Erzsébet Strausz
Chapter 32: International pedagogical relations in fragments: Politics and poetics in the classroom and beyond
Marcos Scauso, Tanya B. Schwarz and Cecelia Lynch
Chapter 33: Training in critical interpretivism, within and beyond the academy
Steve Fuller
Chapter 34: The dialectic of politics and science from a post-truth standpoint: An outsider's perspective on the field of International Relations
Nicholas Onuf
Chapter 35: What we do: International Relations as craft
Part 05: Looking Ahead: The Future of Meta-Analysis
Lucian M. Ashworth
Chapter 36: A historiographer's view: Rewriting the history of international thought
John G. Gunnell
Chapter 37: Meta-analysis: A philosophical view
Ole Wæver
Chapter 38: A sociologist's view: Keeping it worldly