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Catastrophic comparisons: International Relations through elsewhere

Van Wingerden, Enrike (2023) Catastrophic comparisons: International Relations through elsewhere. PhD thesis, London School of Economics and Political Science.

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Identification Number: 10.21953/lse.00004566

Abstract

Comparisons: International Relations Through Elsewhere is a study of comparisons in International Relations. Yet, it is not a comparative study in the conventional sense. This thesis is less concerned with using comparison as a particular technique of gathering, analyzing, and assessing information about the world than with understanding comparison as a way of intervening into that world. By excavating how and why people compare situations of political catastrophe, this thesis positions comparison as part of the equipment that actors in international relations draw upon in their worldly engagements. To investigate how comparisons do not simply capture but intervene in international relations, this thesis is based upon an ethnography of comparisons. Through ethnographic fieldwork and interviews, it analyzes how Palestine becomes compared to other sites of political contestation, focusing specifically on Ireland, South Africa, and Turtle Island (an Indigenous name for “North America”). These places have historical linkages with the Palestinian movement, and the Palestinian experiences of occupation, settler-colonialism, and repression continue to resonate deeply today. By studying the “catastrophic comparisons” that are drawn between these political contexts, this thesis argues that comparisons translate political experiences, (re)draw political relations, and (re)compose political issues in international relations. It traces the chains of matter and meaning that link everyday comparisons to the grander workings of international relations. Through comparison, Palestine becomes an amalgamation of heterogenous elements, a product of international multiplicity, composed of local trajectories as well as histories and futures elsewhere.

Item Type: Thesis (PhD)
Additional Information: © 2023 Enrike van Wingerden
Library of Congress subject classification: J Political Science > JA Political science (General)
J Political Science > JZ International relations
Sets: Departments > International Relations
Supervisor: Lawson, George and Sidel, John T.
URI: http://etheses.lse.ac.uk/id/eprint/4566

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