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LEADER: 11434cam 22007334a 4500
001 ocm54806454
003 OCoLC
005 20191125183203.0
008 040322s2005 nyua b 000 0 eng
007 ta
010 $a 2004006652
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050 00 $aJZ1242$b.I574 2005
050 14 $aJX1395$b.I578 2005
082 00 $a327.1$222
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245 00 $aInternational politics :$benduring concepts and contemporary issues /$c[edited by] Robert J. Art, Robert Jervis.
250 $a7th ed.
260 $aNew York :$bPearson/Longman,$c℗♭2005.
300 $axii, 594 pages :$billustrations ;$c24 cm
336 $atext$btxt$2rdacontent
337 $aunmediated$bn$2rdamedia
338 $avolume$bnc$2rdacarrier
504 $aIncludes bibliographical references.
505 0 $aMachine derived contents note: Brief Contents -- Part 1 Anarchy and Its Consequences -- Power and Principle in Statecraft -- The Consequences of Anarchy -- The Mitigation of Anarchy -- Part 2 The Uses of Force -- The Political Uses of Force -- The Political Utility of Force Today -- The Spread of Nuclear Weapons -- Part 3 The International Political Economy -- Perspectives on Political Economy -- Interdependence and Globalization -- The Pros and Cons of Globalization -- Part 4 Contemporary World Politics -- Conflict, War, and Terrorism -- The Uses of American Power -- Failed States, Civil Wars, and Nation-Building -- The Environment and Climate Change -- New Actors and New Forces -- Detailed Contents -- Part 1 Anarchy And Its Consequences -- Power and Morality in Statecraft -- Hans J. Morgenthau Six Principles of Political Realism -- J. Ann Tickner A Critique of Morgenthau's Principles of Political Realism -- The Consequences of Anarchy -- Kenneth N. Waltz The Anarchic Structure of World Politics -- John J. Mearsheimer Anarchy and the Struggle for Power -- Alexander Wendt Anarchy Is What States Make of It -- The Mitigation of Anarchy -- Kenneth A. Oye The Conditions for Cooperation in World Politics -- Michael W. Doyle Kant, Liberal Legacies, and Foreign Affairs -- Stephen M. Walt Alliances: Balancing and Bandwagoning -- Hans J. Morgenthau The Future of Diplomacy -- Stanley Hoffmann The Uses and Limits of International Law -- Robert O. Keohane International Institutions: Can Interdependence Work? -- Adam Roberts The United Nations and International Security -- Part 2 The Uses of Force -- The Political Uses of Force -- Robert J. Art The Four Functions of Force -- Thomas C. Schelling The Diplomacy of Violence -- Robert J. Art Coercive Diplomacy -- Robert Jervis Offense, Defense, and the Security Dilemma -- Brian M. Jenkins International Terrorism -- The Political Utility of Force Today -- Robert O. Keohane and Joseph S. Nye Complex Interdependence and the Role of Force -- Robert J. Art The Fungibility of Force -- Robert A. Pape The Strategic Logic of Suicide Terrorism -- The Spread of Nuclear Weapons -- Scott D. Sagan Nuclear Instability in South Asia -- Kenneth N. Waltz Nuclear Stability in South Asia -- Part 3 The International Political Economy -- Perspectives on Political Economy -- Robert Gilpin The Nature of Political Economy -- Robert O. Keohane Hegemony in the World Political Economy -- Bruce R. Scott The Great Divide in the Global Village -- The Meaning of Globalization -- Jeffrey Frankel Globalization of the International Economy -- Peter F. Drucker The Changed World Economy -- Richard Rosecrance The Trading State-Then and Now -- Kenneth N. Waltz Globalization and Governance -- The Pros and Cons of Globalization -- Dani Rodrik Trading in Illusions -- John Micklethwait and Adrain Wooldridge Why the Globalization Backlash is Stupid -- William Finnegan The Economics of Empire -- Part 4 Contemporary World Politics -- Conflict, War, and Terrorism -- Robert Jervis The Era of Leading Power Peace -- Samuel P. Huntington The Clash of Civilizations? -- Jessica Stern Al Qaeda: The Protean Enemy -- The Uses of American Power -- Robert Jervis Explaining the Bush Doctrine -- G. John Ikenberry America's Imperial Temptation -- Charles Krauthammer The Unipolar Moment Revisited -- Joseph S. Nye, Jr. The Battle Between Unilateralists and Multilateralists -- Failed States, Civil Wars, and Nation-Building -- Robert I. Rotberg Failed States, Collapsed States, and Weak States: Cause and Indicators -- Paul Collier The Market for Civil War -- Chaim Kaufmann Possible and Impossible Solutions to Ethnic Civil Wars -- James Dobbins The United States and Nation-Building -- The Environment and Climate Change -- Garrett Hardin The Tragedy of the Commons -- Julian L. Simon The Infinite Supply of Natural Resources -- Thomas Homer-Dixon Cornucopians and Neo-Malthusians -- Thomas C. Schelling What Makes Greenhouse Sense? -- New Actors and New Forces -- Margaret E. Keck and Kathryn Sikkink Transnational Activist Networks -- Rhoda E. Howard and Jack Donnelly Human Rights in World Politics -- Moses Naim The Five Wars of Globalization -- Jake Rakove Europe's Floundering Fathers -- Steven R. Ratner International Law: The Trials of Global Norms -- Stephen D. Krasner The State is Alive and Well -- Preface -- The first edition of International Politics appeared in 1973. Since then, the field of international relations -- has experienced a dramatic enrichment in the subjects studied and the quality of works published. Political economy -- came into its own as an important subfield in the 1970s. New and important works in the field of security studies -- appeared. The literature on cooperation among states flourished in the early 1980s, and important studies about the -- environment began to appear in the mid-1980s. Feminist, postmodernist, and constructivist critiques of the -- mainstream made their appearance also. With the end of the Cold War, these new issues came to the fore: human -- rights, the tension between state sovereignty and the obligations of the international community, the global -- environment, civil wars, failed states, and nation-building. The growing diversity of the field has closely mirrored -- the actual developments in international relations. -- As for the previous editions, in fashioning the seventh, we have kept in mind both the new developments in -- world politics and the literature that has accompanied them. Central to this edition, though, as for the other six, is -- our belief that the realm of international politics differs fundamentally from that of domestic politics. Therefore, we -- have continued to put both the developments and the literature in the context of the patterns that still remain valid -- for understanding the differences between politics in an anarchic environment and politics that takes place under a -- government. The theme for this edition continues to revolve around enduring concepts and contemporary issues in -- world politics. -- The seventh edition retains the four major subdivisions of the sixth edition. We have left Part One as it -- appears in the sixth edition, but have added new selections by Hans J. Morgenthau, John J. Mearsheimer, and Robert -- O. Keohane. Part Two retains the first two subsections of the sixth edition, but with two new selections by Robert -- Art and Robert Pape. In addition, a new subsection on the spread of nuclear weapons has been added with articles by -- Scott Sagan and Kenneth Waltz. We have consolidated the discussion of globalization in Part 3, and added two new -- selections by Jeffrey Frankel and William Finnegan. Finally, in Part 4, we have added two new subsections-one on -- the uses of American power; the other on failed states, civil war, and nation-building-and added ten new selections -- by Jessica Stern, Robert Jervis, John Ikenberry, Charles Krauthammer, Joseph Nye, Robert Rotberg, Paul Collier, -- James Dobbins, Thomas Schelling, Moises Naim, and Jack Rakove. -- The seventh edition of International Politics is nearly 40 percent new, but it continues to follow the four -- principles that have guided us throughout all previous editions: -- 1. A selection of subjects that, even though they do not exhaustively cover the field of -- international politics, nevertheless encompasses most of the essential topics that we teach in our introductory -- courses. -- 2. Individual readings that are mainly analytical in content, that take issue with one another, -- and that thereby introduce the student to the fundamental debates and points of view in the field. -- 3. Editors' introductions to each part that summarize the central concepts the student must -- master, that organize the central themes of each part, and that relate the readings to one another. -- 4.
505 0 $aA reader that can be used either as the core around which to design an introductory -- course or as the primary supplement to enrich an assigned text. -- Finally, in putting together the fourth, fifth, sixth, and seventh editions, we received excellent advice from -- the following colleagues, whom we would like to thank for the time and care they took: Andrew Bennett, -- Georgetown University; Timothy McKeown, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; Roslin Simowitz, -- University of Texas at Arlington; Robert J. Griffiths, University of North Carolina at Greensboro; Linda S. Adams, -- Baylor University; Timothy M. Cole, University of Maine; Robert C. Gray, Franklin & Marshall College; James A. -- Mitchell, California State University, Northridge; Margaret E. Scranton, University of Arkansas at Little Rock; -- David G. Becker, Dartmouth College; and James A. Caporaso, University of Washington. -- Robert J. Art -- Robert Jervis.
650 0 $aInternational relations.
650 0 $aWorld politics$y1989-
650 0 $aGlobalization.
650 7 $aGlobalization.$2fast$0(OCoLC)fst00943532
650 7 $aInternational relations.$2fast$0(OCoLC)fst00977053
650 7 $aWorld politics.$2fast$0(OCoLC)fst01181381
650 17 $aInternationale politiek.$2gtt
650 17 $aInternationale economische betrekkingen.$2gtt
650 7 $aPoli tica internacional.$2larpcal
650 7 $aRelac ʹo es internacionais.$2larpcal
650 07 $aInternationale Politik.$2swd
648 7 $aSince 1989$2fast
700 1 $aArt, Robert J.
700 1 $aJervis, Robert,$d1940-
856 41 $3Table of contents$uhttp://catdir.loc.gov/catdir/toc/ecip0416/2004006652.html
856 41 $zTable of contents$uhttp://catdir.loc.gov/catdir/toc/ecip0416/2004006652.html
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