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Index
Half title
Title page
Imprints page
Dedication
Contents
Tables, figures and boxes
Contributors
Preface and acknowledgements
Introduction: The origins and changing agendas of international relations
Contents
Introduction
What are international relations?
International Relations as a discipline: Traditions, origins and evolution
Traditions of thought
Origins and evolution of the discipline
Globalising International Relations
Changing agendas: Theory and practice
The ‘critical turn’ against the ‘Great Divide’
From states, war and law to globalisation and global governance
Conclusion
Discussion questions
Further reading
Part 1 Theories of International Relations
Contents
1 International Relations theory in an age of critical diversity
Contents
Introduction
The necessity of theory
Ontology, epistemology and the science question in International Relations theory
Mainstream International Relations theory
The era of critical diversity
Conclusion
Discussion questions
Further reading
2 Liberalism
Contents
Introduction
Liberalism
The historical-political context
Contemporary liberal International Relations theory
Questioning contemporary liberal International Relations theory
Conclusion
Discussion questions
Further reading
3 Realism
Contents
Introduction
Who are the realists? Genesis of a tradition of thought
The classical approach: Realism
A turning point: The ‘international anarchy’
The structural approach: Neo-realism
What is realism? Synthesising theory and practice
The state
Anarchy
Prudence and responsibility
Conclusion
Discussion questions
Further reading
4 Marxism and critical theory
Contents
Introduction
Historical and intellectual context: Marx and the critique of capitalism
Marxism as historical materialism
Marx and Marxism in International Relations
Critical theories of International Relations
Frankfurt School Critical Theory in International Relations
Gramscian critical theory in International Relations
Neo-Gramscianism and the ‘organic crisis’ of neoliberalism
Conclusion
Discussion questions
Further reading
5 Feminism
Contents
Introduction
Feminist interventions into international relations
The feminist International Relations agenda
Challenging the masculine bias in International Relations
Where are the women?
Reconstructing international relations: Examining the differences between sex and gender
From women to gender
Feminist theories of international relations
Liberal feminism
Critiques of liberal feminism
Critical and postmodern feminisms
Conclusion: What does feminism add to our study of international relations?
Discussion questions
Further reading
6 Postmodernism
Contents
Introduction
Postmodernity as a new historical period
Postmodernism as a critical way of understanding modernity
The emergence of the third debate in IR scholarship
Polemical critiques and the legacy of postmodernism
Conclusion
Discussion questions
Further reading
7 Constructivism
Contents
Introduction
What does constructivism do? Identity and international institutions
Constructivism’s understanding of change in the international system
Identity and governance
International conflict and security communities
Conclusion
Discussion questions
Further reading
8 Theories of global justice
Contents
Introduction
Justice and international relations
Why justice is global
Equality and the categorical imperative
The requirements of justice
Interdependence and globalisation
What is a just global order?
Egalitarian justice
Global justice in practice
Cosmopolitan democracy
Conclusion
Discussion questions
Further reading
Part 2 International history
Contents
9 From the Great War to World War II
Contents
Introduction
International history and the study of International Relations
After World War I: The Paris Peace Conference
The League of Nations
The Soviet Union in International Relations
The United States and international order
The Great Depression
Asia’s rise
Hitler’s world
Appeasement and the path to war
Conclusion: Reflections on the ‘great’ inter-war era
Discussion questions
Further reading
10 The Cold War and after
Contents
Introduction
The beginnings of the Cold War, 1945–53
The Cold War spreads, 1953–69
Détente and the ‘second’ Cold War, 1969–85
The end of the Cold War, 1985–91
The Cold War and International Relations
Conclusion: The continuing legacy of the Cold War
Discussion questions
Further reading
Part 3 The traditional agenda
Contents
11 The modern state
Contents
Introduction
What is a state?
Origins of the modern state
The idea of the sovereign state
The meaning of state sovereignty
Historical origins of the idea of state sovereignty
The triumph of the sovereign state: State-building as war-making
The rise of the modern state
Disarming competing powers
Whither the sovereign state?
Conclusion
Discussion questions
Further reading
12 Nations and nationalism
Contents
Introduction
Terminological debates
How nationalism shaped modern states and international society
Understanding nations and nationalism in International Relations
New nationalisms in contemporary world politics
Conclusion
Discussion questions
Further reading
13 Security
Contents
Introduction
Security and insecurity in the early twenty-first century
Defining security
Key theories and concepts
Realist approaches
Liberal approaches
Constructivist approaches
Critical and feminist approaches
Conclusion
Discussion questions
Further reading
14 Arms control
Contents
Introduction
What is arms control?
Why do states engage in arms-control practices?
Cold War arms control
Why is arms control still important?
New initiatives in arms control: Conventional weapons
Arms control and International Relations theory
Nuclear weapons: A special case?
The Humanitarian Initiative and a treaty banning nuclear weapons
Conclusion
Discussion questions
Further reading
15 The causes of war
Contents
Introduction
The causes of war and International Relations
The causes of war: Questions and answers
Necessary conditions of war
Common causal paths to war
Contributory causes of war
Chance occurrences
War-conducive mechanisms
Key actions and inactions
Conclusion
Discussion questions
Further reading
16 The changing character of warfare
Contents
Introduction
The diversity of warfare
War as violence
War as organised violence
War and politics
War as a case of ‘between’
War as large scale
Conclusion
Discussion questions
Further reading
17 The ethics and laws of war
Contents
Introduction
When is it right to fight (jus ad bellum)?
How should war be waged (jus in bello)?
Jus ad bellum dilemma: Pre-emptive self-defence
Jus in bello dilemma: Suicide car bombs
Conclusion
Discussion questions
Further reading
18 International law
Contents
Introduction
What is international law?
Sources of international law
Debates about international law
Contemporary examples of international law
The International Criminal Court
The South China Sea
Conclusion
Discussion questions
Further reading
19 The globalisation of international society
Contents
Introduction
International society and its expansion: Insights from the English School of International Relations
The expansion of international society
The English School’s rosy vision of the expansion of international society
The expansion of international society: An unfinished project?
Conclusion
Discussion questions
Further reading
20 Diplomacy
Contents
Introduction
Defining diplomacy: What is diplomacy and who are the diplomats?
The evolution of diplomacy
Pre-modern diplomacy
Modern diplomacy in the Westphalian era
The future of diplomacy in a post-Westphalian world
Trends
Modern diplomacy still rules
Less negotiating, more representation and lobbying
Getting out of the embassy
The rise of the hyphenated diplomat
Diplomacy and the study of International Relations
Conclusion
Discussion questions
Further reading
21 Great powers
Contents
Introduction
What is a great power?
The great powers in historical perspective
The great powers in the theory of International Relations
The great powers and international order
The great powers and international change
The great powers after the Cold War
Conclusion
Discussion questions
Further reading
Part 4 The new agenda
Contents
22 The United Nations
Contents
Introduction
The United Nations in the Charter
The principal organs of the United Nations
The United Nations as actor, forum and resource
The United Nations as an actor
The United Nations as a forum
The United Nations as a resource
Conclusion
Discussion questions
Further reading
23 Non-state actors: Multinational corporations and international non-governmental organisations
Contents
Introduction
Multinational corporations: Transnationalised material power
Transnationalisation: Multinational corporations
International agency: Social formation
Political status and influence
International non-governmental organisations: Transnationalised normative power
Transnationalisation: INGOs
International agency: Social formation
Political status and influence
Conclusion
Discussion questions
Further reading
24 Religion and secularism
Contents
Introduction
Religion and International Relations
History of a concept: Secularism
Secularism and world politics
The politics of secularism in the Middle East and North Africa
Tunisia
Iran
Beyond the politics of ‘secular versus religious’
Conclusion
Discussion questions
Further reading
25 Global economic institutions
Contents
Introduction
Global governance and the global economy
Perspectives on global economic institutions
Global economic institutions and the management of the global economy
The International Monetary Fund
The World Bank
The World Trade Organization
The global economic institutions and contemporary challenges
Conclusion
Discussion questions
Further reading
26 Global trade and finance
Contents
Introduction
Who is afraid of the global economic system?
The rise and fall of the Bretton Woods system, 1946–71
Domestic stagflation, international over-lending and international competitiveness, 1972–81
Debt crises at home and abroad, 1982–92
Talking about architecture, 1993–2004
Promises, promises: Credit booms and liquidity busts, 2004–16
Conclusion: Crisis, cooperation and the re-emergence of economic nationalism
Discussion questions
Further reading
27 Global poverty, inequality and development
Contents
Introduction
Global poverty and inequality in development
A relational approach to global poverty, inequality and development
From the Millennium Development Goals to the 2030 Sustainable Development Goals
Perspectives on the Millennium Development Goals and the Sustainable Development Goals
Advocates of the MDG and SDG initiatives
Critics of the MDG and SDG initiatives
Conclusion
Discussion questions
Further reading
28 Globalisation and its critics
Contents
Introduction
Understanding globalisation
Anti-capitalist politics
Scholarly critiques of globalisation
Conclusion
Discussion questions
Further reading
29 Terrorism
Contents
Introduction
When and why did this issue become important to the study of International Relations?
What are the major issues and debates in the study of terrorism?
The definition of terrorism
How to distinguish terrorism from related concepts
What are the most useful concepts for understanding and analysing this topic?
Typologies of terrorism
Waves of terrorism in modern history
Strategies of terrorism
What is at stake in this issue? Why and to whom does it matter?
Conclusion
Discussion questions
Further reading
30 Post-conflict state-building
Contents
Introduction
The rise of post-conflict state-building
The post-conflict state-building agenda
The politics of post-conflict state-building
Critics of the current agenda
Impacts of post-conflict state-building
The future of post-conflict state-building
Conclusion
Discussion questions
Further reading
31 Humanitarianism and armed intervention
Contents
Introduction
The origins of humanitarianism
A short history of humanitarian intervention
The responsibility to protect
Conclusion
Discussion questions
Further reading
32 Human rights
Contents
Introduction
The historical development of an idea
The human rights idea today
The politics of liberal universalism
The future of human rights
Conclusion
Discussion questions
Further reading
33 Migration and refugees
Contents
Introduction
States, refugees and immigrants
Controlling migration: A brief history
The origins and purposes of refugee law
Origins
Purposes
The distribution of refugees around the world
The present situation
Conclusion
Discussion questions
Further reading
34 Global environmental politics
Contents
Introduction
The rise of the environment as a global political problem
Key discourses
From limits to growth to sustainable development
Ecological security
Environmental justice
Theories of global environmental politics
Realism and neoliberal institutionalism
From critical theory to global political ecology
The United States as the swinging climate state
Conclusion
Discussion questions
Further reading
35 Climate change
Contents
Introduction
A brief history of climate change politics
The organisation of the negotiations
Explaining the global politics of climate change
Conclusion
Discussion questions
Further reading
Glossary
References
Index
Acknowledgements
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