The Palgrave Macmillan History of International Thought

The International Thought of Alfred Zimmern

Chronologie aller Bände (1 - 3)

Die Reihenfolge beginnt mit dem Buch "Pluralist Democracy in International Relations". Wer alle Bücher der Reihe nach lesen möchte, sollte mit diesem Band von Leonie Holthaus beginnen. Der zweite Teil der Reihe "The International Thought of Alfred Zimmern" ist am 13.03.2022 erschienen. Mit insgesamt 3 Bänden wurde die Reihe über einen Zeitraum von ungefähr 4 Jahren fortgesetzt. Der neueste Band trägt den Titel "Marxism and the Origins of International Relations".

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  • Start der Reihe: 15.12.2018
  • Neueste Folge: 22.10.2022

Diese Reihenfolge enthält 3 unterschiedliche Autoren.

Cover: Pluralist Democracy in International Relations
  • Autor: Holthaus, Leonie
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  • Medium: Buch
  • Veröffentlicht: 15.12.2018
  • Genre: Sonstiges

Pluralist Democracy in International Relations

This book demonstrates the importance of democracy for understanding modern international relations and recovers the pluralist tradition of L. T. Hobhouse, G. D. H. Cole, and David Mitrany. It shows that pluralism’s typical interest in civil society, trade unionism, and transnationalism evolved as part of a wide-ranging democratic critique that representative democracies are hardly self-sustaining and are ill-equipped to represent all entitled social and political interests in international relations. Pluralist democratic peace theory advocates transnational loyalties to check nationalist sentiments and demands the functional representation of social and economic interests in international organizations. On the basis of the pluralist tradition, the book shows that theories about domestic democracy and international organizations co-evolved before scientific liberal democratic peace theory introduced new inside/outside distinctions.
Cover: The International Thought of Alfred Zimmern
  • Autor: Baji, Tomohito
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  • Medium: Buch
  • Veröffentlicht: 13.03.2022
  • Genre: Politik

The International Thought of Alfred Zimmern

This book is a comprehensive examination into the shifting international thought of Alfred Zimmern, a Grecophile intellectual, one of the most prominent liberal internationalists and the world’s first professor of IR. Identifying the writings of Burke and cultural Zionism as two important ideological sources that defined his project for empire and global order, this book argues that Zimmern can best be understood as an apostle of Commonwealth. It shows that while his proposals changed from cosmopolitan democracy to Euro-Atlanticism and to world federal government, they were constantly shaped by the organizing principles of a professedly universal British Commonwealth. It was the empire transhistorically chained to classical Athens.

Cover: Marxism and the Origins of International Relations

Marxism and the Origins of International Relations

This book investigates to what extent and in what ways Marxist writings and precepts on imperialism informed the so-called idealist stage of International Relations (IR). Though the formative years of International Relations coincide with a vibrant period in Marxist political thought, Marxism is strikingly absent from the historiography of the discipline. Building on the work of revisionist scholars, the book reconstructs the writings of five benchmark IR thinkers. Villanueva analyzes the cases of John Hobson, Henry Brailsford, Leonard Woolf, Harold Laski and Norman Angell to explore the influence that Marxism played in their thinking, and in the “idealist years” of the discipline more generally. He ultimately demonstrates that, although Marxist thought has been neglected by mainstream IR disciplinary historians, it played a significant role in the discipline’s early development. As such, this book both challenges the exclusion of Marxist thought from the mainstream disciplinary histories of IR and contributes to a deeper understanding of the role it played in early 20th century IR theory.

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