An Introduction to International RelationsInvaluable to students and those approaching the subject for the first time, An Introduction to International Relations, Second Edition provides a comprehensive and stimulating introduction to international relations, its traditions and its changing nature in an era of globalisation. Thoroughly revised and updated, it features chapters written by a range of experts from around the world. It presents a global perspective on the theories, history, developments and debates that shape this dynamic discipline and contemporary world politics. Now in full-colour and accompanied by a password-protected companion website featuring additional chapters and case studies, this is the indispensable guide to the study of international relations. |
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Page xix
... June 2009 20.1 Allied leaders Winston Churchill (UK), Franklin D. Roosevelt (US) and Joseph Stalin (USSR) at the Yalta Conference, February 1945 20.2 The Cold War: NATO and Warsaw Pact countries (1949–89) 29 33 70 107 178 277 412 ...
... June 2009 20.1 Allied leaders Winston Churchill (UK), Franklin D. Roosevelt (US) and Joseph Stalin (USSR) at the Yalta Conference, February 1945 20.2 The Cold War: NATO and Warsaw Pact countries (1949–89) 29 33 70 107 178 277 412 ...
Page 1
Excitement will die down after a flurry of activity and the poor souls will inevitably be cast back to the margins of international attention as developed countries return to more pressing domestic matters – tax ...
Excitement will die down after a flurry of activity and the poor souls will inevitably be cast back to the margins of international attention as developed countries return to more pressing domestic matters – tax ...
Page 2
Second, the study of international relations is not reducible to what happens in particular countries, even though it may include this. Political machinations in other countries, especially powerful ones, always hold particular interest ...
Second, the study of international relations is not reducible to what happens in particular countries, even though it may include this. Political machinations in other countries, especially powerful ones, always hold particular interest ...
Page 16
Yet GEIs continue to exercise, controversially, a great deal of influence over countries of the global South (see Chapters 24 and 27). Debate continues about the power of these institutions to regulate the global economy and in whose ...
Yet GEIs continue to exercise, controversially, a great deal of influence over countries of the global South (see Chapters 24 and 27). Debate continues about the power of these institutions to regulate the global economy and in whose ...
Page 57
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Contents
1 | |
21 | |
2 Realism | 35 |
3 Liberalism | 48 |
4 Marxism and Critical Theory | 62 |
5 Feminism | 76 |
6 Postmodernism | 91 |
7 Constructivism | 103 |
20 The Cold War | 281 |
3 The New Agenda | 295 |
Multinational Corporations and International NonGovernmental Organisations | 310 |
23 Religion and Secularism | 322 |
24 Global Economic Institutions | 336 |
25 Global Trade | 348 |
26 Global Finance | 360 |
27 Global Poverty Inequality and Development | 372 |
8 Theories of Global Justice | 119 |
2 The Traditional Agenda | 133 |
10 Nations and Nationalism | 148 |
11 Security | 160 |
12 Arms Control | 172 |
13 The Causes of War | 189 |
14 The Changing Character of Warfare | 199 |
15 The Ethics and Laws of War | 218 |
16 International Law | 231 |
17 International Society and European Expansion | 243 |
18 Diplomacy | 256 |
19 Great Powers | 268 |
28 Globalisation and Its Critics | 386 |
29 Global Terrorism | 398 |
30 PostConflict StateBuilding | 414 |
31 Humanitarian Intervention | 426 |
32 Human Rights | 440 |
33 Migration and Refugees | 450 |
34 Global Environmental Politics | 462 |
35 Climate Change | 475 |
Glossary of Terms | 487 |
Bibliography | 502 |
Index | 542 |
Other editions - View all
An Introduction to International Relations Richard Devetak,Anthony Burke,Jim George No preview available - 2011 |
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action actors agenda approaches argue arms associated authority become called causes century challenge Chapter claim climate Cold concept concerns considered contemporary continue Convention countries crisis critical cultural debate diplomacy discussion dominant economic effect emerged environmental established European example exist force further global globalisation governance groups historical human rights humanitarian idea identity important individuals institutions interests international law international relations international society issues justice liberal limited lives major Marxism means military moral nature norms nuclear organisations particular peace political poverty practice present principles problems production protect questions realist reference refugee regime religion remain responsibility role rules scholars secularism seek significant social society sovereign structures terrorism theory thought trade traditional treaties understanding United University violence weapons women