فهرست مطالب :
Cover\nContents\nList of Figures\nPreface to the First Edition\nPreface to the Second Edition\nIntroduction: History and the Discipline(s) of International Relations\n History\n Political Science\n IR\n Recommended readings\nPart I IR: The History of a Discipline\n1 The Discipline of IR from the First World War to the Early Cold War\n The “great debates” tradition\n The foundation years\n Idealism, Realism, and a First Great Debate?\n An American discipline defined: Morgenthau and the uses of history\n Recommended readings\n2 After Morgenthau: Scientific Realism and Its Critics\n IR, scientism, and a bipolar world\n From the Cuban missile crisis to a “managed” Cold War\n The end of the Cold War\n Radical perspectives and critiques\n Recommended readings\n3 The Other Social Sciences and the State\n Sociology and Anthropology\n Economics and political economy\n Psychology\n Recommended readings\nPart II IR and International History\n4 The Ancient World\n States, empires, and the origins of diplomacy in the ancient Near East\n Father of the discipline? The Greeks, the Polis, and Thucydides\n After the fifth-century Greeks: From Alexander to the Romans\n The ancient world and IR schools of thought\n The Lessons of Late Antiquity?\n Recommended readings\n5 IR’s Middle Ages\n Universal empire, universal church, and feudalism: The medievalproblematic in Europe\n Diplomacy in the Middle Ages\n The early medieval Muslim world\n The Crusades\n The later medieval, early modern Muslim world\n Difference\n Recommended readings\n6 Machiavelli, the Italian City-State, and The Prince\n Historicizing Machiavelli\n Machiavelli’s The Prince, in his time\n And in ours: A work “for all time”?\n Recommended readings\n7 The Sovereign State and the “Westphalian System” in\rEarly Modern Europe\n The European territorial state before Westphalia\n Westphalia in IR\n Ultima Ratio Regum: War, balance of power, and international law in ancienregime Europe\n Recommended readings\n8 Nation, State, and Empire in the Long Nineteenth Century\n The European system restored and maintained\n The system challenged and remade\n International Relations in Europe and abroad after 1870\n The coming of the Great War\n Recommended readings\n9 The Failure of Diplomacy, New and Old, and the End of European\rHegemony\n War and peace\n The Twenty Years’ Crisis\n The Second World War and “the provincializing of Europe”\n The postwar settlement\n Recommended readings\n10 Cold War and Post-Cold War\n The rhetoric of narration\n More than metaphor, but what kind of reality?\n The end of the Cold War\n Post-Cold War\n Recommended readings\nPart III Contemporary IR and the Uses of History\n11 Civilizations, Religion, and a Darker Globalization: Sovereignty,\rWorld Orders, and Western Decline in Twenty-First-Century IR\n The West versus the rest?\n Religion and the new “post-secularity”\n Within and beyond the historical and future state: The limits of sovereignty\n Globalization and global governance: International organizations (IOs) andliberal internationalism/institutionalism in twenty-first-century IR\n BRICS in IR\n Recommended readings\n12 The Uncertain Future of Liberal Theory and of Grand Theory\rin Twenty-First-Century IR\n Global human rights\n The democratic peace\n The end of International Relations Theory?\n Recommended readings\nAfterword: Description, Prediction, Policy—Does History Matter?\n Whither?\n Recommended readings\nAppendix A: Glossary of Terms\nAppendix B: Works Cited in Text\nAppendix C: Timeline\nIndex