MARC details
000 -LEADER |
fixed length control field |
09417nam a2200217Ia 4500 |
003 - CONTROL NUMBER IDENTIFIER |
control field |
OSt |
005 - DATE AND TIME OF LATEST TRANSACTION |
control field |
20231219094809.0 |
008 - FIXED-LENGTH DATA ELEMENTS--GENERAL INFORMATION |
fixed length control field |
220128s9999 xx 000 0 und d |
020 ## - INTERNATIONAL STANDARD BOOK NUMBER |
International Standard Book Number |
9781137398802 |
040 ## - CATALOGING SOURCE |
Transcribing agency |
CUS |
082 ## - DEWEY DECIMAL CLASSIFICATION NUMBER |
Classification number |
327 |
Item number |
GRI/I |
100 ## - MAIN ENTRY--PERSONAL NAME |
Personal name |
Grieco, Joseph |
9 (RLIN) |
7008 |
245 #0 - TITLE STATEMENT |
Title |
Introduction to International Relations: Enduring Questions and Contemporary Perspectives |
250 ## - EDITION STATEMENT |
Edition statement |
2nd, ed. |
260 ## - PUBLICATION, DISTRIBUTION, ETC. (IMPRINT) |
Place of publication, distribution, etc. |
United Kingdom: |
Name of publisher, distributor, etc. |
Macmillan International Higher Education, |
Date of publication, distribution, etc. |
2019. |
300 ## - PHYSICAL DESCRIPTION |
Extent |
587p. |
505 ## - FORMATTED CONTENTS NOTE |
Formatted contents note |
Machine generated contents note: 1.Understanding International Relations --<br/>Did you know that what we currently consider international relations can be traced back at least 2,500 years? --<br/>How Does International Relations Affect Us? --<br/>Who is Involved in International Relations? --<br/>How Do These Actors Get What They Want in International Relations? --<br/>How Can We Understand and Analyze International Relations? --<br/>Theoretical Foundations --<br/>Levels of Analysis --<br/>Making Connections: Aspiration versus Reality --<br/>Recognizing Enduring Questions --<br/>Making Connections: Then and Now --<br/>Research Insight --<br/>How Can We View World Politics from Different Perspectives? --<br/>Recognizing Great-Power Centrism --<br/>Recognizing Cleavages within the International System --<br/>Looking Ahead --<br/>2.The Emergence of a Global System of States, 1500-Today --<br/>How did a fragmented world become a global, integrated system of states for which order is an ongoing problem? --<br/>Starting Point: The World in 1500 --<br/>The Formation of the International Political System, 1500-1900 --<br/>A State System Emerges in Western Europe --<br/>European Pursuit of Foreign Empire --<br/>Why were European States Successful Imperialists? --<br/>World War I and World War II, 1900-45 --<br/>World War I --<br/>The Interwar Period: Failed Global Reconstruction, 1919-39 --<br/>War Comes Again to Europe and the World, 1939-45 --<br/>The Global Struggle of the Cold War, 1945-89 --<br/>The World in 1945 --<br/>Explaining the Origins of the Cold War --<br/>The Cold War as an International Order --<br/>The End of the Cold War and the Collapse of the Soviet Union --<br/>The View from the South: Decolonization, the Non-Aligned Movement, and the Quest for a New International Economic Order --<br/>Decolonization --<br/>The Non-Aligned Movement and Pressure for a New International Economic Order --<br/>The Contemporary International Order, 1989-Present --<br/>From the Unipolar Era to the Return of Great-Power Politics --<br/>Globalization and Its Discontents --<br/>The Prevalence of International Terrorism --<br/>Revisiting the Enduring Question and Looking Ahead --<br/>3.Theories of International Relations --<br/>How do theoretical traditions in international relations differ on how to understand actors and their behavior on the global stage? --<br/>The Realist Tradition --<br/>Realist Assumptions --<br/>Realist Propositions --<br/>The English School of International Relations --<br/>The Liberal Tradition --<br/>Liberal Assumptions --<br/>Liberal Propositions --<br/>Neo-Liberal Institutionalism --<br/>The Marxist Tradition --<br/>Marxist Assumptions --<br/>Marxist Propositions --<br/>The Constructivist Tradition --<br/>Constructivist Assumptions --<br/>Constructivist Propositions --<br/>Critical Theory and the Feminist Tradition --<br/>The Feminist Tradition --<br/>Feminist Propositions --<br/>Comparing Traditions --<br/>Revisiting the Enduring Question and Looking Ahead --<br/>4.The Analysis of Foreign Policy --<br/>What motivates and influences the behavior of states toward one another? --<br/>Foreign Policy Analysis: Connections to International Relations --<br/>The Study of International Relations and the Analysis of Foreign Policy --<br/>Core Concepts of Foreign Policy --<br/>Foreign Policy Interests --<br/>Foreign Policy Strategy --<br/>The Sources of Foreign Policy --<br/>Sources of Foreign Policy at the Individual Level of Analysis --<br/>Sources of Foreign Policy at the State Level of Analysis --<br/>Sources of Foreign Policy at the International Level of Analysis --<br/>How and Why States Change Their Foreign Policy --<br/>Sources of Foreign Policy Change at the Individual Level of Analysis --<br/>Sources of Foreign Policy Change at the State Level of Analysis --<br/>Sources of Foreign Policy Change at the International Level of Analysis --<br/>Revisiting the Enduring Question and Looking Ahead --<br/>5.Framing International Relations: The Role of Laws and Organizations --<br/>How important are international laws and organizations in a world of sovereign states? --<br/>Basic Concepts and Distinctions --<br/>Types of International Law --<br/>Types of International Organization --<br/>Domestic vs. International Law --<br/>Domains of International Law and Organizations --<br/>When May States Launch Wars? --<br/>Humanitarian Intervention and the 'Responsibility to Protect' --<br/>International Law and the Human Rights Revolution --<br/>The World's Oceans and Waterways --<br/>Theoretical Explanations for the Existence of International Law and Organizations --<br/>The Liberal Tradition: Law as Functional Problem-Solver --<br/>The Realist Tradition: Law as Derivative of State Power and Interests --<br/>The Marxist Tradition: Law Reinforces the Economic Divide --<br/>The Constructivist Tradition: Law Embodies the Norms of World Politics --<br/>Theoretical Explanations for the Effectiveness of International Law and Organizations --<br/>The Liberal Tradition --<br/>The Realist Tradition --<br/>The Constructivist Tradition --<br/>Revisiting the Enduring Question and Looking Ahead --<br/>6.War and Its Causes --<br/>Why is war a persistent feature of international relations? --<br/>Wars between Countries --<br/>Types of Military Conflicts between Countries --<br/>Incidence of International Military Conflicts --<br/>Lethality of International Wars --<br/>Immediate Causes of War --<br/>Underlying Causes of War: The Individual Level of Analysis --<br/>Misperception, Stress, and 'Motivated Biases' --<br/>Social Psychology of Small Groups: Groupthink --<br/>Personality Trait of Leaders: Over-Optimism --<br/>Underlying Causes of War: The State Level of Analysis --<br/>Domestic Economic Systems and War --<br/>Domestic Political Institutions and Governmental Processes --<br/>Nationalism and War --<br/>Societal Gender Relations and International Conflict --<br/>Underlying Causes of War: The International Level of Analysis --<br/>Anarchy as a Permissive Condition for War --<br/>Anarchy as a Propellant of International Conflict --<br/>Internal Wars and their Causes --<br/>Internal Wars and Their Impact on International Peace and Security --<br/>Internal Wars: Types and Trends --<br/>Causes of Internal Wars --<br/>Revisiting the Enduring Question and Looking Ahead --<br/>7.Pathways to Interstate Peace --<br/>What factors make it more likely that states can resolve their differences and avoid war? --<br/>The International Distribution of Power as a Condition for Peace --<br/>Balance of Power --<br/>Hegemony --<br/>State Strategies for Achieving Interstate Peace --<br/>Diplomacy --<br/>Power Balancing --<br/>International Law and Institutions as Mechanisms for Peace --<br/>Three Experiences with International Law and Institutions: The League of Nations, the United Nations, and the European Union --<br/>Transnational Mechanisms for Peace --<br/>Economic Interdependence --<br/>A Possible International Community of Democratic Nations --<br/>Peace Movements and Global Civil Society --<br/>Revisiting the Enduring Question and Looking Ahead --<br/>8.Technology, the Use of Force, and Weapons of Mass Destruction --<br/>How have weapons of mass destruction, and in particular nuclear weapons, changed the practice of international relations? --<br/>Technology and the Historical Evolution of Warfare --<br/>Nuclear Weapons and the Nuclear Revolution --<br/>The Devastating Effects of Nuclear Weapons --<br/>The Nuclear Revolution --<br/>Nuclear Proliferation and Efforts to Halt it --<br/>Obtaining Nuclear Capability: Difficult but Not Impossible --<br/>Why do States Want Nuclear Weapons? --<br/>How Dangerous Is Nuclear Proliferation? --<br/>Efforts to Halt Proliferation: The Grand Bargain --<br/>Chemical and Biological Weapons --<br/>How They Work and Efforts to Control Them --<br/>Comparing Nuclear, Biological, and Chemical Weapons --<br/>Weapons of Mass Destruction, Non-State Actors, and Terrorism --<br/>New Technologies and New Challenges: Drones and Cyber-Warfare --<br/>Drones --<br/>The Emergence of Cyber-Warfare --<br/>Revisiting the Enduring Question and Looking Ahead --<br/>9.International Economics: Basic Theory and Core Institutions --<br/>How does international politics shape the global economy? --<br/>Basic Elements of International Trade Theory and Policy --<br/>Building Blocks for Analysis: Consumption and Production --<br/>Comparative Advantage --<br/>The Gains from Trade --<br/>Why Do Countries Protect Themselves from Trade? --<br/>Basic Elements of International Money --<br/>National Exchange-Rate Systems --<br/>Multinational Enterprises and International Political Economy --<br/>Definition and Characteristics of Multinational Enterprises --<br/>Importance of MNEs to the World Economy --<br/>Political Issues Surrounding MNEs --<br/>The Institutions of the World Economy --<br/>International Trade: From GATT to VVTO to the New Regionalism --<br/>International Finance: Why Is the IMF so Controversial? --<br/>Global Governance: From the G-7 and G-8 to the G-20 --<br/>Revisiting the Enduring Question and Looking Ahead --<br/>10.States and Markets in the World Economy --<br/>How do governments manage international economic relations to further national political objectives? --<br/>Two Great Eras of Economic Globalization --<br/>States and Markets: Three Great Traditions of Thought --<br/>Economic Liberalism --<br/>Economic Nationalism -- |
700 ## - ADDED ENTRY--PERSONAL NAME |
9 (RLIN) |
7009 |
Personal name |
Ikenberry, John G & Mastanduno, Michael |
942 ## - ADDED ENTRY ELEMENTS (KOHA) |
Source of classification or shelving scheme |
|
Koha item type |
General Books |
Koha issues (borrowed), all copies |
8 |
947 ## - LOCAL PROCESSING INFORMATION (OCLC) |
a |
3099 |