“…Nearly two decades ago Neta Crawford () observed that “realist and idealist discourse about emotions—what has been said and not said about anger, fear, love, empathy, the desire for revenge, and so on—has shaped the discipline in important respects” (p. 156). This call to investigate the emotional underpinnings of key theories and concepts in IR has since been taken up by a number of scholars (e.g., Kertzer & McGraw, ; Ross, ; Solomon, ). However, of the emotional categories Crawford () identified, comparatively little has been said by IR scholars about empathy (key exceptions include Head, , ; White, ).…”