Nov 22, 2016 Essential Readings in World Politics introduces students to key literature in international relations and provides everything instructors need to round out their syllabus, including classic readings and contemporary articles on ongoing international issues drawn from a wide range of sources and accompanied by headnotes offering the context and background that introductory students need. Find helpful customer reviews and review ratings for Essential Readings in World Politics 4th at Amazon.com. Read honest and unbiased product reviews from our users.
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APA Citation
Mingst, Karen A.,Snyder, Jack . (Eds.) (200) Essential readings in world politics /New York : W.W. Norton & Co.,
MLA Citation
Mingst, Karen A.,Snyder, Jack L, eds. Essential Readings In World Politics. New York : W.W. Norton & Co., 200. Print.
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edited by Karen A. Mingst and Jack L. Snyder
Approaches -- 'One world, rival theories' / Jack Snyder -- 'Melian dialogue' / Thucydides -- 'To perpetual peace : a philosophical sketch' / Immanuel Kant -- from Imperialism, the highest stage of capitalism : a popular outline / V. I. Lenin -- History -- 'The Fourteen Points' / Woodrow Wilson -- 'The sources of Soviet conduct' / George F. Kennan ('X') -- 'The end of history?' / Francis Fukuyama -- 'The National Security Strategy of the United States of America' / George W. Bush -- Contending perspectives -- 'A realist theory of international politics' and 'Political power' / Hans Morgenthau -- 'Anarchy and the struggle for power' / John Mearsheimer -- 'Liberalism and world politics' / Michael W. Doyle -- 'Anarchy is what states make of it : the social construction of power politics' / Alexander Wendt -- 'Man, the state, and war : gendered perspectives on national security' / J. Ann Tickner -- The international system -- 'Does order exist in world politics?' / Hedley Bull -- 'The balance of power,' 'Different methods of the balance of power,' and 'Evaluation of the balanced power' / Hans Morgenthau -- 'The rise and future demise of the world capitalist system : concepts for comparative analysis' / Immanuel Wallerstein -- 'Systemic leadership, evolutionary processes, and international relations theory : the unipolarity question' / William R. Thompson -- 'Imperialism, liberalism and the quest for perpetual peace' / Anthony Pagden -- The state -- 'Sharing sovereignty : new institutions for collapsed and failing states' / Stephen D. Krasner -- 'The real new world order' / Anne-Marie Slaughter -- 'The clash of civilizations?' / Samuel P. Huntington -- 'Political Islam : asking the wrong questions?' / Yahya Sadowski --
The individual -- 'Hypotheses on misperception' / Robert Jervis -- from Retreat from Doomsday : the obsolescence of major war / John Mueller -- IGOs, NGOs, and international law -- 'The political origins of the UN Security Council's ability to legitimize the use of force' / Erik Voeten -- 'A too perfect union? Why Europe said 'No' / Andrew Moravcsik -- 'Transnational advocacy networks in international politics' and 'Human rights advocacy networks in Latin America' / Margaret E. Keck, Kathryn Sikkink -- 'Bystanders to genocide : why the United States let the Rwandan tragedy happen' / Samantha Power -- 'The pitfalls of universal jurisdiction' / Henry A. Kissinger -- 'The case for universal jurisdiction' / Kenneth Roth -- 'The false promise of international institutions' / John J. Mearsheimer -- War and strife -- 'War as an instrument of policy' / Carl Von Clausewitz -- 'The diplomacy of violence' / Thomas C. Schelling -- 'Cooperation under the security dilemma' / Robert Jervis -- 'How to keep the bomb from Iran' / Scott D. Sagan -- from Final solutions : mass killing and genocide in the twentieth century / Benjamin A. Valentino -- 'The security dilemma and ethnic conflict' / Barry R. Posen -- 'The strategic logic of suicide terrorism' / Robert A. Pape -- 'Why terrorism does not work' / Max Abrahms -- 'Oil, drugs, and diamonds : the varying roles of natural resources in civil war' / Michael L. Ross -- 'A feminist ethical perspective on weapons of mass destruction' / Carol Cohn, Sara Ruddick -- International political economy -- 'The nature of political economy' / Robert Gilpin -- 'Globalization, development, and international institutions : normative and positive perspectives' / Helen V. Milner -- from Why globalization works / Martin Wolf -- 'The five wars of globalization' / Moisés Naím -- 'The first law of petropolitics' / Thomas L. Friedman -- 'Female labor, regional crises, and feminist responses' / Valentine M. Moghadam -- Globalization and globalizing issues -- 'The healers : triumph and tragedy' / William Easterly -- 'The next pandemic?' / Laurie Garrett -- 'Universal truths : human rights and the Westernizing illusion' / Amartya Sen -- 'The attack on human rights' / Michael Ignatieff
Mingst is Lockwood Chair Professor at the Patterson School of Diplomacy and International Commerce at the University of Kentucky. She holds a Ph.D.
In political science from the University of Wisconsin. A specialist in international organization, international law, and international political economy, Professor Mingst has conducted research in Western Europe, West Africa, and Yugoslavia. She is the author or editor of seven books and numerous academic articles. She has frequently taught the introductory international relations course. In addition, she has traveled and lectured extensively at universities around the globe.Jack L. Snyder is the Robert and Renee Belfer Professor of International Relations in the Department of Political Science and the Saltzman Institute of War and Peace Studies at Columbia University.
He holds a Ph.D. From Columbia. His books include Electing to Fight: Why Emerging Democracies Go to War, coauthored with Edward D. Mansfield (MIT Press, 2007) and From Voting to Violence: Democratization and Nationalist Conflict (W.W. Norton, 2000).
His articles on such topics as crisis diplomacy, democratization and war, nationalism, imperial overstretch, war crimes tribunals versus amnesties, international relations theory after September 11, and anarchy and culture have appeared in Foreign Affairs, Foreign Policy, International Organization, International Security, and World Politics. Professor Snyder teaches graduate and undergraduate courses on nationalism, comparative methods, and grand strategy.
Professor Snyder is a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and an elected member of Columbia's Arts and Sciences Policy and Planning Committee. He is the editor of the Norton Series in World Politics.
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