International studies in an unpredictable world: still avoiding the difficult problems?

Author:

Fomin Ivan123ORCID,Kokarev Konstantin4,Ananyev Boris5,Neklyudov Nikita6,Bondik Anzhelika7,Glushkov Pavel8,Safina Aliya7,Stolyarova Svetlana9,Tkach Dmitry10,Vedernikova Oksana,Yakovenko Irina8,Korobkova Daria7,Kovaleva Daria11,Kuzina Ekaterina7,Voronina Darya8,Chekov Alexander12,Sushentsov Andrey13,Wohlforth William141

Affiliation:

1. Laboratory of International Trends Analysis, MGIMO University, Russian Federation

2. Institute of Scientific Information for Social Sciences of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Center for Advanced Methods of Social Studies and Humanities, Russian Federation

3. Faculty of Social Sciences, School of Politics and Governance, National Research University Higher School of Economics, Russian Federation

4. Russian Presidential Academy of National Economy and Public Administration, RANEPA Academic Library, Russian Federation

5. Department of Political Theory, MGIMO University, Russian Federation

6. Institute for International Studies, MGIMO University, Russian Federation

7. Russian Presidential Academy of National Economy and Public Administration Institute of Business Studies, Department of International Relations, Russian Federation

8. Department of International Relations, MGIMO University, Russian Federation

9. Department of World Politics, MGIMO University, Russian Federation

10. Department of Applied International Problems Analysis, Laboratory of International Trends Analysis, Institute for International Studies, MGIMO University, Russian Federation

11. Laboratory of International Trends Analysis, Institute for International Studies, MGIMO University, Russian Federation, Russian Federation

12. Department of International Relations and Russian Foreign Policy, Institute for International Studies, Laboratory of International Trends Analysis, MGIMO University, Russian Federation

13. Institute for International Studies, Laboratory of International Trends Analysis, MGIMO University, Russian Federation

14. Department of Government, Dartmouth College, USA

Abstract

We revisit and empirically evaluate crucial yet under-examined arguments articulated in “God Gave Physics the Easy Problems” (2000), the authors of which emphasized that, in International Relations (IR) predictions, predominant nomothetic approaches should be supplemented with concrete scenario thinking. We test whether the IR predictive toolkit is in fact dominated by nomothetic generalizations and, more broadly, map the methodological profile of this subfield. We build on the TRIP database, supplementing it with extensive original coding to operationalize the nuances of predictive research. In particular, we differentiate between nomoscopic predictions (predictive generalizations) and idioscopic predictions (predictions for concrete situations), showing that this distinction is not reducible to other methodological cleavages. We find that even though in contemporary IR an increasing number of articles seek to provide predictions, they consistently avoid predictions about concrete situations. The proportion of idioscopic predictions is stably small, with an even smaller proportion of predictions that develop concrete narratives or specify any determinate time period. Furthermore, those idioscopic studies are mostly limited to a niche with specialized themes and aims. Thus, our research shows that the critical claims from 20 years ago are still relevant for contemporary IR, as the “difficult problem” of developing predictive scenarios is still consistently overlooked in favor of other objectives. Ultimately, the types of predictions that IR scholars develop depend on their specific aims and constraints, but the discipline-wide result is a situation in which international studies’ ambition to provide predictions grows, but they tend to reproduce the same limitations as they did in 2000.

Funder

ministry of science and higher education of the russian federation

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Political Science and International Relations,Sociology and Political Science

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