International Relationsoffers a guide to the state of International Relations theory during the Cold War. It provides a critical commentary on the literature of the time and covers all aspects of this discipline in detail.
Margot Lightis Emeritus Professor of International Relations at the Department of International Relations of the London School of Economics and Political Science, UK.
A.J.R. Groomis Emeritus Professor of International Relations at the University of Kent, UK.
IntroductionMargot Light and A.J.R. Groom
Part I The Paradigmatic Debate
1. The Inter-Paradigm DebateMichael Banks
2. Normative ApproachesMark J. Hoffman
3. World Society and Human NeedsJ.W. Burton
4. Development and DependencyChris Brown
5. Structuralism and Neo-RealismRichard Little
6. MethodologyMichael Nicholson
7. A Personal SynthesisA.V.S. de Reuck
Part II Partial Theories
8. Power, Influence and AuthorityA.V.S. de Reuck
9. Conflict, War and Conflict ManagementC.R. Mitchell
10. StrategyA.J.R. Groom
11. Foreign Policy AnalysisChristopher Hill and Margot Light
12. Integration and DisintegrationA.J.R. Groom and Alexis Heraclides
13. Anthropological AspectsA.V.S. de Reuck
14. Psychological AspectsA.N. Oppenheim
15. TextbooksDennis J.D. Sandole
Notes on Contributors
Index