Introduction to International Relations: Enduring Questions and Contemporary Perspectives (Record no. 210454)

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
Holdings
Withdrawn status Lost status Source of classification or shelving scheme Damaged status Not for loan Home library Current library Shelving location Date acquired Source of acquisition Cost, normal purchase price Total Checkouts Total Renewals Full call number Barcode Date last seen Date last checked out Cost, replacement price Price effective from Koha item type
          Central Library, Sikkim University Central Library, Sikkim University General Book Section 22/02/2022 68 3221.82 8 2 327 GRI/I 050597 19/12/2023 19/12/2023 4027.28 22/02/2022 General Books
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