Part I. Introduction
1: Mlada Bukovansky and Edward Keene: Modernity and Granularity in
History and International Relations
Part II. Readings
2: R. B. J. Walker: Origins, Histories, and the Modern
International
3: Michael C. Williams: Historical Realism
4: Lucian M. Ashworth: Liberal Progressivism and International
History
5: Maïa Pal: Historical Sociology in International Relations
6: George Lawson and Jeppe Mulich: Global History and International
Relations
7: Duncan Bell: International Relations and Intellectual
History
8: Laura Sjoberg: Gender, History, and International Relations
9: Zeynep Gulsah Capan: Postcolonial Histories of International
Relations
10: Peter Jackson and Talbot Imlay: International Relations Theory
and the Practice of International History
11: Chen Yudan: Global Sources of International Thought
Part III. Practices
12: Jordan Branch and Jan Stockbruegger: State, Territoriality, and
Sovereignty
13: Linda S. Frey and Marsha L. Frey: Diplomacy
14: Martin J. Bayly: Empire
15: Yongjin Zhang: Barbarism and Civilization
16: Nivi Manchanda: Race and Racism
17: Cecelia Lynch: Religion, History, and International
Relations
18: Andrea Paras: Rights
19: A. Dirk Moses: The Diplomacy of Genocide
20: Tarak Barkawi: War and History in World Politics
21: James Mayall: Nationalism
22: Lauren Benton: Interpolity Law
23: Eric Helleiner: Regulating Commerce
24: Corinna R. Unger: Development
25: Kevin L. Young and Signe Predmore: Governing Finance
26: Eric Selbin: Revolution
Part IV. Locales (Spatial, Temporal, Cultural)
27: Julia Costa Lopez: The 'Premodern' World
28: Ayse Zarakol: Modernity and Modernities in International
Relations
29: Jacinta O'Hagan: The 'West' in International Relations
30: Daniel Gordon: The Eighteenth Century
31: Quentin Bruneau: The Long Nineteenth Century
32: John Anthony Pella, Jr.: The Pre-Colonial African State
System
33: Michael Gobat: The 'Americas' in the History of International
Relations
34: David C. Kang: 'Asia' in the History of International
Relations
35: Or Rosenboim: The 'International' and the 'Global' in
International History
Part V. Moment
36: Jonathan Harris: The Fall of Constantinople
37: Andrew Phillips: The Peace of Westphalia
38: Karl W. Schweizer: The Seven Years War
39: Musab Younis: The Haitian Revolution
40: Jennifer Mitzen and Jeff Rogg: The Congress of Vienna
41: Daniel M. Green: The Revolutions of 1848
42: Alexander E. Davis: The Indian 'Mutiny'
43: Claire Vergerio: The Berlin and Hague Conferences
44: Duncan Kelly: World War One and Versailles
45: Megan Donaldson: Sykes-Picot
46: Daniel Gorman: World War Two and San Francisco
47: Christopher J. Lee: The Bandung Conference
48: Richard Ned Lebow and Benoît Pelopidas: Facing Nuclear War:
Luck, Learning, and the Cuban Missile Crisis
Part V. Conclusion
49: Maja Spanu and Christian Reus-Smit: History and the
International: Time, Space, Agency, and Language
Mlada Bukovansky is Professor of Government at Smith College,
Northampton Massachusetts.
Edward Keene is Associate Professor of International Relations at
the University of Oxford and Official Student of Politics at Christ
Church.
Christian Reus-Smit is Professor of International Relations at the
University of Queensland and a Fellow of the Academy of the Social
Sciences in Australia.
Maja Spanu is Affiliated Lecturer at the University of Cambridge
and Head of Research and International Affairs, Fondation de
France.
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