Introduction: History and the Discipline(s) of International Relations I. The History of a Discipline: Origins, Theory, and Tools 1. From the First World War to the Early Cold War 2. After Morgenthau: Scientific Realism and Its Critics 3. IR, the Other Social Sciences, and the State II. IR and International History 4. The Ancient World: Thucydides and the Search for Origins 5. Toward the Machiavellian Moment: IR's Middle Ages 6. The Sovereign State and the “Westphalian System” in Early- Modern Europe 7. Nation, State, and Empire in the Long Nineteenth Century 8. The Failure of the New (and Old) Diplomacy and the End of European Hegemony 9. Cold War and Post-Cold War III. Contemporary IR and the Uses of History 10. Civilizations, the Myth of Sovereignty, and the Democratic Peace: The End of IR (As We Know It)? Afterword: tbc History of International Relations: A timeline Glossary of terms Bibliography Index
A historical approach to the foundations, development and evolution of international relations from the ancient world to the present day, covering both western and non-western practice and theory.
Howard LeRoy Malchow is Walter S. Dickson Professor of English and American History, Tufts University, USA.
I use the current edition in my International Relations theory
course and highly recommend it to my political science students
because of its conversation between history and political science.
This book works well in a variety of political science and history
courses.
*Kristin Shockley, Professor of Political Science, Florida Atlantic
University, USA*
It is extremely well-written, readable, and provides valuable
insight into the evolution of International Relations as a
discipline and how history fits in to that evolution. I see this
text as… the best, most accessible source there is out there at the
moment.
*David J. Proctor, Senior Lecturer of History, Tufts University,
USA*
[This book is] very concise and comprehensive and extremely well
organized. There are a number of introductory International
Relations texts but this one is unique in its broadly historical
approach to the discipline.
*Joseph A. Maiolo, Professor of International History, King’s
College London, United Kingdom*
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