Browse Subject Headings
Restraining Power : The Law of Nature and the Theory of International Relations
Restraining Power : The Law of Nature and the Theory of International Relations
Click to enlarge
Author(s): Hendrickson, David C.
ISBN No.: 9781836742463
Pages: 336
Year: 202609
Format: Trade Paper
Price: $ 48.93
Dispatch delay: Dispatched between 7 to 15 days
Status: Available (Forthcoming)

PREFACE ACKNOWLEDGMENTS A NOTE ON THE BIBLIOGRAPHY I. The War Problem 1. The Duty of Peace 2. The Goals of States 3. Cold Monsters 4. A Pattern in Miniature II.Facts and Values 5. Three Ways of Knowing 6.


Parsimony and Prediction as False Gods 7. A Different Map III. Rival Approaches 8. The American Science of International Politics 9. International Society and the English School IV.The Law of Nature on a New Foundation 10. Grotius Breaks the Ice 11. The Significance of Hobbes 12.


Samuel Pufendorf is the Man 13. Vattel: The Law of Nature Applied to Nations 14. The Rise and Fall of Legal Positivism 15. The UN Charter and the Law of Nature 16. The Preeminent Theory of International Relations V.Classical Realism and Classical Idealism 17. Reason of State 18. Diplomacy and Duplicity 19.


Thucydides and the War of the Peloponnese 20. Hard and Soft Realism 21. The Classical Idealists VI.The American Realists 22. The Enigma of Hans J. Morgenthau 23. The Realists and US Foreign Policy 24. The Clash of Civilizations VII.


Four Doctrines in Liberalism 25. Two Directions for the Law of Nature 26. The Rise of the Market 27. Natural Right and the African Slave Trade 28. Institutional Liberalism and the American Founding 29. The Use and Abuse of Democratic Peace Theory 30. A Balance Sheet VIII.Contemporary IR Theory and the Washington Policy Debate 31.


Lebow and the Ancients 32. Republican Security Theory 33. Nonzerosumness and Restraint 34. Hegemonic Discourses 35. States and Nations 36. Mugged by Reality: IR Theory and American Militarism 37. Hawks and Doves IX.Varieties of Revolutionism 38.


Neoconservatism: The United States as a Revolutionary Power 39. Radical Enlightenment 40. Rival Theories of Intervention 41. Marxism and the Class Struggle 42. Hard and Soft Revolutionism 43. Edmund Burke and the Constitutional Tradition X.The Law of Nature in the 21st Century 44. What the Law of Nature Is 45.


The United States and the Law of Nature 46. In Defense of Pluralism 47. Cognitive Empathy 48. Lasting Relevance SELECT BIBLIOGRAPHY INDEX.


To be able to view the table of contents for this publication then please subscribe by clicking the button below...
To be able to view the full description for this publication then please subscribe by clicking the button below...
Browse Subject Headings