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The Oxford Handbook of International Relations (Oxford Handbooks) PDF

787 Pages·2008·4.206 MB·English
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THE OXFORD HANDBOOKS OF POLITICAL SCIENCE ••• the oxford handbook of INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS t h e o x f o r d h a n d b o o k s o f p o l i t i c a l s c i e n c e General Editor: Robert E. Goodin The Oxford Handbooks of Political Science is a ten-volume set of reference books offering authoritative and engaging critical overviews of all the main branches of politicalscience. TheseriesasawholeisundertheGeneralEditorshipofRobertE.Goodin,with eachvolumebeingeditedbyadistinguishedinternationalgroupofspecialistsintheir respectivefields: POLITICAL THEORY JohnS.Dryzek,BonnieHonig&AnnePhillips POLITICAL INSTITUTIONS R.A.W.Rhodes,SarahA.Binder&BertA.Rockman POLITICAL BEHAVIOR RussellJ.Dalton&Hans-DieterKlingemann COMPARATIVE POLITICS CarlesBoix&SusanC.Stokes LAW & POLITICS KeithE.Whittington,R.DanielKelemen&GregoryA.Caldeira PUBLIC POLICY MichaelMoran,MartinRein&RobertE.Goodin POLITICAL ECONOMY BarryR.Weingast&DonaldA.Wittman INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS ChristianReus-Smit&DuncanSnidal CONTEXTUAL POLITICAL ANALYSIS RobertE.Goodin&CharlesTilly POLITICAL METHODOLOGY JanetM.Box-Steffensmeier,HenryE.Brady&DavidCollier Thisseriesaspirestoshapethediscipline,notjusttoreportonit.LiketheGoodin– KlingemannNewHandbookofPoliticalScienceuponwhichtheseriesbuilds,eachof these volumes will combine critical commentaries on where the field has been togetherwithpositivesuggestionsastowhereitoughttobeheading. the oxford handbook of ....................................................................................................................... INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS ....................................................................................................................... Editedby CHRISTIAN REUS-SMIT and DUNCAN SNIDAL 1 3 GreatClarendonStreet,Oxfordox26dp OxfordUniversityPressisadepartmentoftheUniversityofOxford. ItfurtherstheUniversity’sobjectiveofexcellenceinresearch,scholarship, andeducationbypublishingworldwidein OxfordNewYork AucklandCapeTownDaresSalaamHongKongKarachi KualaLumpurMadridMelbourneMexicoCityNairobi NewDelhiShanghaiTaipeiToronto Withofficesin ArgentinaAustriaBrazilChileCzechRepublicFranceGreece GuatemalaHungaryItalyJapanPolandPortugalSingapore SouthKoreaSwitzerlandThailandTurkeyUkraineVietnam OxfordisaregisteredtrademarkofOxfordUniversityPress intheUKandincertainothercountries PublishedintheUnitedStates byOxfordUniversityPressInc.,NewYork ©Theseveralcontributors2008 Themoralrightsoftheauthorshavebeenasserted DatabaserightOxfordUniversityPress(maker) Firstpublished2008 Firstpublishedinpaperback2010 Allrightsreserved.Nopartofthispublicationmaybereproduced, storedinaretrievalsystem,ortransmitted,inanyformorbyanymeans, withoutthepriorpermissioninwritingofOxfordUniversityPress, orasexpresslypermittedbylaw,orundertermsagreedwiththeappropriate reprographicsrightsorganization.Enquiriesconcerningreproduction outsidethescopeoftheaboveshouldbesenttotheRightsDepartment, OxfordUniversityPress,attheaddressabove Youmustnotcirculatethisbookinanyotherbindingorcover andyoumustimposethesameconditiononanyacquirer BritishLibraryCataloguinginPublicationData Dataavailable LibraryofCongressCataloginginPublicationData TheOxfordhandbookofinternationalrelations/editedby ChristianReus-SmitandDuncanSnidal. p. cm.–(Oxfordhandbookofpoliticalscience) ISBN-13:978–0–19–921932–2(acid-freepaper) 1. Internationalrelations. 2. Worldpolitics. I. Reus-Smit,Christian,1961– II.Snidal,Duncan. JZ1242.O94 2008 327–dc22 2008006027 TypesetbySPIPublisherServices,Pondicherry,India PrintedinGreatBritain onacid-freepaperby CPIAntonyRowe,Chippenham,Wiltshire ISBN 978–0–19–921932–2(hbk.) ISBN 978–0–19–958558–8(pbk.) 13579108642 cknowledgements A ....................................................................... Editing a project of this scale incurs many debts. The conversations with friends andcolleaguesthathaveshapedtheHandbook’scontoursaretoomanytoacknowl- edgeindividually.However,severalpeoplestandoutfortheirsingularlyimportant contributions. Robert Goodin is the mastermind behind the Oxford Handbooks of Political Science, and it is he whom we must thank for bringing us together as the editors of this volume. He has been a wonderful source of intellectual and editorial advice, and the path he started us upon has been immensely rewarding. A project such as this could not have beenrealized inits present form wereit not forassistanceprovidedbyLynnSaveryandMary-LouiseHickey.Lynnshouldered theearlyadministrativeburden,andherworkwasinvaluableingettingtheproject off the ground. It was Mary-Louise, however, who shouldered the Herculean task of subsequent organization and editing. It is no exaggeration to say that without hereffortstheHandbookwouldbeapaleshadowofthisfinalversion.Finally,our contributors deserve special thanks. The brief we gave them was challenging, and in most cases we asked them for multiple iterations of their chapters. They rose to the task with good humor and energy, and the quality of their contributions is impressiveandgratifying. ChrisReus-Smit DuncanSnidal ontents C .................................... AbouttheContributors xi PART I INTRODUCTION 1. BetweenUtopiaandReality:ThePracticalDiscoursesof InternationalRelations 3 ChristianReus-Smit&DuncanSnidal PART II IMAGINING THE DISCIPLINE 2. TheStateandInternationalRelations 41 DavidA.Lake 3. FromInternationalRelationstoGlobalSociety 62 MichaelBarnett&KathrynSikkink 4. ThePointIsnotJusttoExplaintheWorldbuttoChangeIt 84 RobertW.Cox 5. ADisablingDiscipline? 94 PhillipDarby PART III MAJOR THEORETICAL PERSPECTIVES 6.EclecticTheorizingintheStudyandPracticeof InternationalRelations 109 PeterKatzenstein&RudraSil 7. Realism 131 WilliamC.Wohlforth viii contents 8. TheEthicsofRealism 150 JackDonnelly 9. Marxism 163 BennoTeschke 10. TheEthicsofMarxism 188 NicholasRengger 11. NeoliberalInstitutionalism 201 ArthurA.Stein 12. TheEthicsofNeoliberalInstitutionalism 222 JamesL.Richardson 13. TheNewLiberalism 234 AndrewMoravcsik 14. TheEthicsoftheNewLiberalism 255 GerrySimpson 15. TheEnglishSchool 267 TimDunne 16. TheEthicsoftheEnglishSchool 286 MollyCochran 17. Constructivism 298 IanHurd 18. TheEthicsofConstructivism 317 RichardPrice 19. CriticalTheory 327 RichardShapcott 20. TheEthicsofCriticalTheory 346 RobynEckersley 21. Postmodernism 359 AnthonyBurke 22. TheEthicsofPostmodernism 378 PeterLawler 23. Feminism 391 SandraWhitworth 24. TheEthicsofFeminism 408 JacquiTrue contents ix PART IV THE QUESTION OF METHOD 25. MethodologicalIndividualismandRationalChoice 425 AndrewH.Kydd 26. SociologicalApproaches 444 FriedrichKratochwil 27. PsychologicalApproaches 462 JamesGoldgeier&PhilipTetlock 28. QuantitativeApproaches 481 EdwardD.Mansfield&JonC.Pevehouse 29. CaseStudyMethods 499 AndrewBennett&ColinElman 30. HistoricalMethods 518 JoelQuirk PART V BRIDGING THE SUBFIELD BOUNDARIES 31. InternationalPoliticalEconomy 539 JohnRavenhill 32. StrategicStudies 558 RobertAyson 33. Foreign-policyDecision-making 576 DouglasT.Stuart 34. InternationalEthics 594 TerryNardin 35. InternationalLaw 612 MichaelByers PART VI THE SCHOLAR AND THE POLICY-MAKER 36. ScholarshipandPolicy-making:WhoSpeaksTruthtoWhom? 635 HenryR.Nau

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