Apresentação do Dossiê "Teoria das Relações Internacionais no Brasil", organizado pela professora Lara Selis (UFU) e pelos Professores Victor Lage (UFBA) e João Urt (UFGD).
Feminist perspectives on gender, colonialism, and coloniality have provided important contributions to the discipline of international relations, particularly by producing dislocations on the established political imaginary. By critically engaging issues of embodiment, violence, and resistance, these perspectives have been able to subvert epistemological positions that objectify subaltern experiences, particularly those of colonized and racialized women. Furthermore, feminism’s ability to account for non-Western experiences of colonialism and coloniality has demanded a fundamental commitment to re-signifying gender violence in ways that markedly challenge its mainstream connotations. In that sense, distinct Latin American and Afrocentric critical approaches have opened different avenues to politicize gender without ignoring the experiences and knowledges of colonized, racialized, and sexualized populations. Their differing perspectives on embodiment emerge from the voices, practices, and struggles of women who refuse liberal diagnoses and solutions to their multiple, long-standing oppressions and experiences of violence. In this regard, it is important to highlight the centrality of popular, communitarian, and indigenous feminists whose actions and reflections have been sustaining revolutionary debates on bodies, states, territories, capitalism, and so forth. A reconstructive feminist narrative must seriously engage with existing practices of resistance to understand the ways in which they have already been reconstructing political imaginaries and grammars. In following this path, a critical feminist approach to international relations can abandon its modern academicist ambitions for universal solutions to recover the plural narratives, memories, knowledges, and interpretations of people as opportunities for experiencing another discipline and, hopefully, another world.
João Pontes Nogueira possui graduação em Economia pela Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro (1984), mestrado em Relações Internacionais pela Pontifícia Universidade Católica do Rio de Janeiro (PUC-Rio, 1994) e doutorado em Relações Internacionais pela University of Denver (1998). Desenvolveu sua pesquisa de Pós-Doutorado na Universidade de Victoria (UVIC), Canadá, onde atou com professor visitante. É professor adjunto do Instituto de Relações Internacionais (IRI) da PUC-Rio desde 2000. Foi secretário executivo e diretor da Associação Brasileira de Relações Internacionais (ABRI, 2005-2009), da qual foi um dos fundadores. Atua, principalmente, nos seguintes temas: teoria das relações internacionais, sociologia política internacional, desigualdade na política mundial, humanitarismo, e o lugar das cidades na política mundial. Foi diretor do IRI/PUC-Rio entre 2008 e 2012 e supervisor-geral do Centro de Estudos dos Países BRICS (BRICS Policy Center) durante o mesmo período. Foi editor-chefe, com Jef Huysmans, da revista International Political Sociology (IPS), da International Studies Association (ISA), de 2012 a 2016, e é membro do conselho editorial de diversas revistas nacionais e internacionais.
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