Office Hours: How (Critical) Norm Research Can Regain Its Voice

Engelkamp Stephan, Glaab Katharina, Renner Judith

Research article (journal) | Peer reviewed

Abstract

Social Science research cannot be neutral. It always involves, so the argument of this article, the (re)production of social reality and thus has to be conceived as political practice. From this perspective, the present article looks into constructivist norm research. In the first part, we argue that constructivist norm research is political insofar as it tends to reproduce Western values that strengthen specific hegemonic discursive structures. However, this particular political position is hardly reflected on in norm research. Hence, it is our goal in the second part of the article to outline research strategies potentially useful in reflective and critical norm research. We propose a critical research program based upon three central methodological steps that are inspired by post-structuralism: first, the questioning of global hegemonic values; second, the reconstruction of marginalized knowledge; and third, the explicit reflection of one's own research perspective.

Details about the publication

JournalWorld Political Science Review
Volume10
Issue1
Page range33-61
StatusPublished
Release year2014
Language in which the publication is writtenEnglish
DOI10.1515/wpsr-2014-0002
KeywordsNorm Research; Constructivism; Postcolonial Theory; Autoethnography

Authors from the University of Münster

Engelkamp, Stephan
Professorship of Sustainable Development (Prof. Fuchs)
Glaab, Katharina
Institute of Political Science (IfPol)