REVIEW 1 major objections 1 minor 21 references
Reviewed by Pith at T0; open to challenge.
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Information retrieval should adopt critical theories that prioritize nondomination to define societal good.
2026-07-01 00:51 UTC pith:Y5U2DZV6
load-bearing objection This is a short position paper arguing IR should adopt critical theory to center nondomination and meet Belkin and Robertson's old call for a societal-good foundation, but it stays at the level of assertion. the 1 major comments →
Towards Critical IR Theories and Practices
The pith
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
To achieve the theoretical foundation for societal good in IR urged by Belkin and Robertson, the field should embrace critical theories and practices and shift away from the dominant liberal frame. The critical frame explicitly adopts nondomination as its stated goal, which clarifies conceptualization of societal good, provides the necessary theoretical underpinning, and serves as a basis for critical appraisals of progress in enacting desired societal change.
What carries the argument
The critical frame, which explicitly adopts nondomination as its stated goal and works by distinguishing itself from the liberal frame to clarify societal good in IR.
Load-bearing premise
That the critical frame, unlike the liberal frame, explicitly adopts nondomination as its goal and thereby clarifies conceptualization of societal good while supplying the necessary theoretical underpinning.
What would settle it
A demonstration that critical theories fail to offer a clearer conceptualization of societal good for IR than the liberal frame or do not provide a usable basis for limiting research that contradicts societal good.
If this is right
- IR researchers would gain a clearer basis for determining when to limit scientific inquiry that conflicts with societal good.
- The field could conduct critical appraisals of its progress in enacting desired societal changes.
- Societal concerns in IR research would be addressed through a frame that prioritizes nondomination over liberal assumptions.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- This shift could prompt new evaluation criteria in IR systems that assess avoidance of domination in addition to relevance or accuracy.
- The approach might connect to power dynamics in recommendation systems or search interfaces where information access affects social hierarchies.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The manuscript argues that IR should embrace critical theories and practices and shift away from the dominant liberal frame. It claims that, unlike the liberal frame, the critical frame explicitly adopts nondomination as its stated goal, which clarifies the conceptualization of societal good and supplies the theoretical underpinning for determining when to limit scientific inquiry that Belkin and Robertson urged the community to develop half a century ago.
Significance. If the central normative argument holds, the paper could encourage IR researchers to adopt critical perspectives that foreground power relations and nondomination when evaluating societal impacts of retrieval systems. It directly engages a long-standing call within the field for theoretical foundations on societal good.
major comments (1)
- [Abstract] Abstract: The claim that the critical frame 'explicitly adopts nondomination as its stated goal' (in contrast to the liberal frame) is load-bearing for the recommendation to shift frames, yet the manuscript provides no citations, definitions, or examples from critical theory literature to substantiate this distinction or to show how it differs from liberal approaches in practice.
minor comments (1)
- The manuscript would benefit from adding explicit bibliographic references to Belkin and Robertson's original work and to representative critical theory sources to allow readers to evaluate the asserted distinctions.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for their review and the recommendation for major revision. We address the single major comment below.
read point-by-point responses
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Referee: [Abstract] Abstract: The claim that the critical frame 'explicitly adopts nondomination as its stated goal' (in contrast to the liberal frame) is load-bearing for the recommendation to shift frames, yet the manuscript provides no citations, definitions, or examples from critical theory literature to substantiate this distinction or to show how it differs from liberal approaches in practice.
Authors: We agree that the abstract would be strengthened by explicit substantiation of this distinction. In the revised manuscript we will add citations to key works in critical theory (including Pettit on republican nondomination and Young on structural injustice), a concise definition of nondomination, and a brief contrast with liberal frames. These additions will be placed in the abstract while preserving its length and will be supported by expanded discussion in the body of the paper. revision: yes
Circularity Check
Normative position paper with no detectable circularity
full rationale
The paper advances a normative recommendation that IR adopt critical theories because they explicitly take nondomination as goal, thereby supplying the theoretical foundation requested by Belkin and Robertson. No equations, fitted parameters, derivations, or self-citations appear in the provided text. The distinction between liberal and critical frames is asserted as part of the advocacy argument rather than derived from any prior result by the same author or reduced to a definitional tautology. The central claim therefore remains independent of its own inputs and receives the default non-circularity finding.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
axioms (2)
- domain assumption The liberal frame is the dominant one through which the IR community views societal concerns.
- domain assumption Critical theories explicitly adopt nondomination as their stated goal.
read the original abstract
Belkin and Robertson urged us, half a century ago, to develop a theoretical foundation for understanding what constitutes societal good that can inform information retrieval (IR) research and serve as a basis for determining when we should limit our scientific inquiry in the face of demands that are contradictory to societal good. In this article, I argue that to achieve this, IR should embrace critical theories and practices in our work, and shift away from the dominant liberal frame through which much of the IR community today view societal concerns in context of our research. Unlike the liberal frame, the critical frame explicitly adopts nondomination as its stated goal which can clarify our conceptualization of societal good within the field, provide necessary theoretical underpinning that Belkin and Robertson urged the community to develop, and serve as a basis for critical appraisals of our progress in enacting desired societal change.
Reference graph
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