Extended Critique--Continued from First Entry One question I asked the Professor during her talk was whether the discursive approach can be considered prescriptive on a broad range of issues. Given that discourse is vague in and of itself, approaches to interpretation open to widespread debate, and no empirical means to prove causation between the framing of a conflict and action taken to deal with it, I was very skeptical about directly applying the discursive method to specific policy analysis. Professor Hansen gave few concrete details, pointing to the highly complex nature of the approach and its need for greater academic acceptance. Nevertheless, her opposition to the perception of new European immigrants as "the other" and her belief in the accountability of individual policymakers provided a few hints to the affirmative. Posted by Boris Ryvkin on November 14, 2006 02:06 PM | Permalink |
Critique of Professor Hansen's Ranking Professor Hansen gave a highly informative and revealing guest lecture about the discursive approach to International Relations. Applying the post-structural approach to conflicts ranging from the Balkan Wars of the 1990s to the current European schism stemming from an increasing immigration wave, Hansen sought to understand how conflicts are shaped in official discourse. Specifically, she aimed to determine how policy decisions are securitized and based around the need to protect certain tangible and intangible revered objects. In the case of the Balkan conflict, whether the official perception was one of a regional war in need of containment and threatening state sovereignty or a campaign of genocide perpetrated against select ethnic minorities led to very different proposals for action. Posted by Boris Ryvkin on November 14, 2006 01:29 PM | Permalink |
My Interpretation and Critique of Lene Hansen’s Threat AssessmentProfessor Lene Hansen from the University of Copenhagen guest lectured recently at both professor Der Derian’s IR135 class and at the Watson Institute. Professor Hansen’s approach to issues in international relations and the Global Security Matrix was that of the discursive approach. Hansen focused more on the question of “how is security constructed in discourse?” and how actors shape that security. Her guest lecture at the IR135 class focused on two main areas. The first being security as seen through the discursive approach (along with an explanation of what is the discursive approach) and then an interpretation and critique of the Global Security Matrix utilizing that approach. She interpreted the security matrix while taking into consideration the true key players at the different levels of global security matrix and how would they interpret the specific category. This basically meant that Hansen looked beyond structure and took into consideration the actions of individuals such as the leader of a state when assessing a security threat. In her opinion, individuals such as leaders must be held accountable for their actions, because their decisions directly affect other variables such as state action. Posted by Ivan Maldonado on November 10, 2006 06:51 PM | Permalink |