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Millennial Reflections on International Studies
Michael Brecher and Frank P. Harvey, EditorsForty-five prominent scholars engage in self-critical, state-of-the-art reflection on international studies to stimulate debates about successes and failures and to address the larger question of progress in the discipline. Written especially for the collection, these essays are in hardcover in the form of an easy-to-use handbook, and in paperback as a number of separate titles, each of which consists of a particular thematic cluster to merge with the range of topics taught in undergraduate and graduate courses in international studies.
The themes addressed are realism, institutionalism, critical perspectives, feminist theory and gender studies, methodology (formal modeling, quantitative, and qualitative), foreign policy analysis, international security and peace studies, and international political economy.
This collection provides an accessible and wide-ranging survey of the issues in the field as well as an invaluable bibliography, and will undoubtedly determine the shape of future research in international studies for the millennium.
Paperbacks for course adoption:
Realism and Institutionalism in International Studies
Michael Brecher and Frank P. Harvey, Editors
Conflict, Security, Foreign Policy, and International Political Economy:Past Paths and Future Directions in International Studies
Michael Brecher and Frank P. Harvey, Editors
Evaluating Methodology in International Studies
Frank P. Harvey and Michael Brecher, Editors
Critical Perspectives in International Studies
Frank P. Harvey and Michael Brecher, Editors
Contributors are: Steve J. Brams, Davis B. Bobrow, Michael Cox, Robert W. Cox, Bruce Bueno de Mesquita, Joseph M. Grieco, Ernst B. Haas , Peter M. Haas, Kal J. Holsti, Ole R. Holsti, Patrick James, Robert O. Keohane, Edward A. Kolodziej, Louis Kriesberg Robert T. Kudrle, David A. Lake, Yosef Lapid, Russell Leng , Jack S. Levy, L. H. M. Ling, Zeev Maoz, Lisa L. Martin, John J. Mearsheimer, Manus I. Midlarsky, Linda B. Miller, Helen Milner , Michael Nicholson, Joseph Nye, V. Spike Peterson , Jan Jindy Pettman, James Lee Ray , James Rosenau, Harvey Starr, J. David Singer, Steve Smith, Christine Sylvester, J. Ann Tickner, John Vasquez, Yaacov Y. I. Vertzberger, R. B. J. Walker, Stephen G. Walker , Jonathan Wilkenfeld, Oran Young, Marysia Zalewski, and Dina A. Zinnes.
Michael Brecher is R. B. Angus Professor of Political Science, McGill University, and former president of the International Studies Association.
Frank P. Harvey is Professor of Political Science and Director, Center for Foreign Policy Studies, Dalhousie University.
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Cover
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Title
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Copyright
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Acknowledgments
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Contents
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The Essence of Millennial Reflections on International Studies
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Realism
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Realism, the Real World, and the Academy
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Modern Realist Theory and the Study of International Politics in the Twenty-first Century
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Realism and the Study of Peace and War
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Performance and Perils of Realism in the Study of International Politics
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Realism and the Democratic Peace: The Primacy of State Security in New Democracies
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Systemism and International Relations: Toward a Reassessment of Realism
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Institutionalism
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Progress in International Relations: Beyond Paradigms in the Study of Institutions
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Institutional Theory in International Relations
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Transnational Relations, Interdependence, and Globalization
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Are Institutions Intervening Variables or Basic Causal Forces? Causal Clusters versus Causal Chains in International Society
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Alternative and Critical Perspectives
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Alternative and Critical Perspectives
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Universality in International Studies: A Historicist Approach
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The Continuing Story of Another Death Foretold: Radical Theory and the New International Relations
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How We Learned to Escape Physics Envy and to Love Pluralism and Complexity
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En Route to Knowledge: Is There a “Third Path” (in the Third Debate)?
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Alternative, Critical, Political
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The Globalization of Globalization
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Feminist Theory and Gender Perspectives
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The Fish and the Turtle: Multiple Worlds as Method
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On the Cut(ting) Edge
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Critical Paradigms in International Studies: Bringing It All Back Home?
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“Progress” as Feminist International Relations
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Feminist Theory and Gender Studies: Reflections for the Millennium
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Feminism and/in International Relations: An Exhausted Conversation? or Feminists Doing International Relations: The Cut(ting) Edge of Contemporary Critical Theory and Practice?
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Methodology
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Formal Methods in International Relations
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Cumulation, Synthesis, and Research Design for the Post-Fourth Wave
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Accomplishments and Limitations of a Game-Theoretic Approach to International Relations
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Game Theory in Practice: Problems and Prospects in Applying It to International Relations
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Reflections on Quantitative International Politics
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Reflections on Millennia, Old and New: The Evolution and Role of Quantitative Approaches to the Study of International Politics
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Quantitative International Politics and Its Critics: Then and Now
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Qualitative Methods in International Relations
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Case Study Methodology in International Studies: From Storytelling to Hypothesis Testing
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Foreign Policy Analysis
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Foreign Policy Analysis: Steady Progress and a Half-Empty Glass
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Beliefs and Foreign Policy Analysis in the New Millennium
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Public Opinion and Foreign Policy Analysis: Where We Were, Are, and Should Strive to Be
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Simulation and Experimentation in Foreign Policy Analysis: Some Personal Observations on Problems and Prospects
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International Security, Peace, and War
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Security Theory: Six Paradigms Searching for Security
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Security and Peace: Understanding, Production, and Work Style
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Convergences between International Security Studies and Peace Studies
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Accounting for Interstate War: Progress and Cumulation
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Notes from the Underground: A Tale of Three Perspectives
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International Political Economy
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Reflections on the Field of International Political Economy
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Some Thoughts on International Political Economy in the Context of Public Policy Education
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International Political Economy: From Paradigmatic Debates to Productive Disagreements
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Conclusions: An Assessment of Millennial Reflections on International Studies
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About the Contributors
- 978-0-472-02394-3 (ebook)
- 978-0-472-11273-9 (hardcover)