Van Rythoven's research examines the intersection between emotion, International Relations, and the politics of security. He is principally interested in what political emotions are, how they shape debates about security, and how they become sites of contestation in global politics. By drawing on...
Van Rythoven's research examines the intersection between emotion, International Relations, and the politics of security. He is principally interested in what political emotions are, how they shape debates about security, and how they become sites of contestation in global politics. By drawing on diverse sources of data — including Parliamentary exchanges, committee hearings, journalistic reports, polling data, interviews, political cartoons, and beyond — he reconstructs collective emotional experiences in ways that highlight constraints and opportunities for claim-making in security discourse.
His work has been published in International Theory, International Political Sociology, Security Dialogue, European Journal of International Relations, Journal of Global Security Studies, Critical Studies on Security, as well as the European Review of International Studies. He is also the co-editor (with Mira Sucharov) of Methodology and Emotion in International Relations (Routledge, 2019).
He teaches a range of courses including Introduction to International Relations, Canadian Foreign Policy, the Globalization of Human Rights, Advanced International Relations Theory, Emotion and Images in International Politics, and Frontiers of Emotional Diplomacy.