The Oxford Handbook of International Relations 1st Edition by Christian ReusSmit, Duncan Snidal – Ebook PDF Instant Download/Delivery. 019958558X, 9780199585588
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ISBN 10: 019958558X
ISBN 13: 9780199585588
Author: Christian ReusSmit; Duncan Snidal
The Oxford Handbook of International Relations offers the most authoritative and comprehensive overview to date of the field of international relations. Arguably the most impressive collection of international relations scholars ever brought together within one volume, the Handbook debates the nature of the field itself, critically engages with the major theories, surveys a wide spectrum of methods, addresses the relationship between scholarship and policy making, and examines the field’s relation with cognate disciplines. The Handbook takes as its central themes the interaction between empirical and normative inquiry that permeates all theorizing in the field and the way in which contending approaches have shaped one another. In doing so, the Handbook provides an authoritative and critical introduction to the subject and establishes a sense of the field as a dynamic realm of argument and inquiry. The Oxford Handbook of International Relations will be essential reading for all of those interested in the advanced study of global politics and international affairs.
The Oxford Handbook of International Relations 1st Table of contents:
Part I Introduction
1. Between Utopia and Reality: The Practical Discourses of International Relations
Part II Imagining The Discipline
2. The State and International Relations
3. From International Relations to Global Society
4. The Point Is not Just to Explain the World but to Change It
5. A Disabling Discipline?
Part III Major Theoretical Perspectives
6. Eclectic Theorizing in the Study and Practice of International Relations
7. Realism
8. The Ethics of Realism
9. Marxism
10. The Ethics of Marxism
11. Neoliberal Institutionalism
12. The Ethics of Neoliberal Institutionalism
13. The New Liberalism
14. The Ethics of the New Liberalism
15. The English School
16. The Ethics of the English School
17. Constructivism
18. The Ethics of Constructivism
19. Critical Theory
20. The Ethics of Critical Theory
21. Postmodernism
22. The Ethics of Postmodernism
23. Feminism
24. The Ethics of Feminism
Part IV The Question of Method
25. Methodological Individualism and Rational Choice
26. Sociological Approaches
27. Psychological Approaches
28. Quantitative Approaches
29. Case Study Methods
30. Historical Methods
Part V Bridging the Subfield Boundaries
31. International Political Economy
32. Strategic Studies
33. Foreign-policy Decision-making
34. International Ethics
35. International Law
Part VI The Scholar and the Policy-Maker
36. Scholarship and Policy-making: Who Speaks Truth to Whom?
37. International Relations: The Relevance of Theory to Practice
Part VII The Question of Diversity
38. International Relations from Below
39. International Relations Theory from a Former Hegemon
Part VIII Old and New
40. The Concept of Power and the (Un)discipline of International Relations
41. Locating Responsibility: The Problem of Moral Agency in International Relations
42. Big Questions in the Study of World Politics
43. The Failure of Static and the Need for Dynamic Approaches to International Relations
44. Six Wishes for a More Relevant Discipline of International Relations
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