International Political Theory Meets InternationalPublic Policy
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Barry, Christian
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Oxford University Press
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How should International Political Theory (IPT) relate to public policy? Should theorists
aspire for their work to be policy-relevant, and if so in what sense? When can we
legitimately criticize a theory for failing to be relevant to practice? In this chapter, I argue
that it counts heavily against a theory if it is not precise enough to guide policy and
reform given certain empirical assumptions, but that theorists should be very cautious
when engaging with questions of policy and institutional design. Some principles of IPT
can be criticized for being insufficiently precise, but a degree of abstraction from
concrete policy recommendations is a virtue, rather than a vice, of IPT. I discuss this issue
with reference to John Rawls’s principle of a duty of assistance.
Keywords: theory and practice, policy advice, non-ideal theory, Rawls’s Law of Peoples, duties to assist
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The Oxford Handbook of International Political Theory
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Restricted until
2037-12-31
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