Introduction
1: International Legitimacy
Part I: Historical International Society
2: Europe and the Scope of International Society
3: Westphalia: The Origins of International Legitimacy?
4: Utrecht: Consensus, Balance of Power, and Legitimacy
5: Revolutionary and Legitimate Orders: Revolution, War, and the
Vienna Settlement
6: Versailles: The Making of an Illegitimate Order?
7: Legitimacy and the Dual Settlement of 1945
Part II: Contemporary International Society
8: Legitimacy after the Cold War
9: Legitimacy and Rightful Membership
10: Legitimacy and Consensus
11: Legitimacy and Norms
12: Legitimacy and Equilibrium
Conclusion
Educated at Glasgow University and Australian National University. Professor of International Politics at Aberystwyth since 1998. 1984-1997 University of Cambridge. Fellow of the British Academy. Honorary Fellow of Selwyn College, Cambridge. Author of several books from OUP, including Legitimacy in International Society, The Post-Cold War Order, Globalization and the Theory of International Relations; and Globalization and Fragmentation.
`Review from previous edition Legitimacy in International Society
is an immensely scholarly work, well researched and closely
argued.'
Times Higher Education Supplement, March 2006.
`Ian Clark's book offers the most comprehensive analysis of
legitimacy in international relations available today, in the
process breathing new life into the concept of international
society. Few international relations scholars today can demonstrate
such range and relevance.
'
Perspectives on Politics
`In this work, Clark achieves the objective of showing how
legitimacy is intrinsically connected to international society.
'
Journal of Peace, May 2006
`This book constitutes a sound study of the role of legitimacy in
the international realm.
'
Journal of Peace Research, Vol 43, May 2006
`Clark provides one of the most systematic and historically
informed accounts of international legitimacy to appear in many
years.
'
Foreign Affairs
`Ian Clark's contribution is a theoretically sophisticated,
historically rooted and timely work, that justly proclaims itself
the most sustained treatment of the concept of legitimacy yet
attempted in an International Relations context.
'
Cambridge Review of International Affairs
`In short, this is a superb, provocative volume that has in one
swoop placed legitimacy firmly on the agenda and significantly
raised the intellectual bar on its study. It is essential and
rewarding reading.
'
International Affairs
`Ian Clark's Legitimacy in International Society is a timely
contribution...Clark has provided us with a rich understanding of
the role of this concept in IR, and in doing so has secured its
place in the English Schools lexicon
'
Political Studies Review
`Clark's book deserves a wide reading. He seamlessly incorporates
history and theory into an insightful analysis of an important
concept.
'
Politics and Ethics
`Ian Clark's exceptionally interesting book should reinvigorate the
debate about the nature of legitimacy in the rapidly evolving
international context. This important book deserves a significant
audience.
'
Millennium
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