The goal of this paper is to investigate the change in the narratives about war and peace brought with the professionalization of the discipline of International Relations (IR). It deals with three prominent figures of thought who wrote very impacting books to this debate over the decades: the Admiral Alfred T. Mahan, author of The influence of sea power upon history (1890), greatly influencing military conceptions and strategies that led to the pre-Great War arms race, Norman Angell, seen as a leading intellectual of the peace movement for his campaign on the general public and elite education of the dangers of The Great Illusion (1912), and Edward H. Carr, the English historian considered one of the founders of IR with his Twenty Year...
Violence and war were ubiquitous features of politics long before the emergence of the modern state ...
The first object of this paper, therefore, is to consider in very general terms the intellectual his...
Can international relations (IR) be a distinctive discipline? In the present paper I argue that such...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Boston University PLEASE NOTE: Boston University Libraries did not receive an Autho...
Classics of international relations introduces, contextualises and assesses 24 of the most important...
Immanuel Kant's Perpetual Peace is widely recognized as a foundational International Relations text....
This paper provides a brief review of almost one century of academic research within the discipline ...
According to International Relations (IR) orthodoxy, the story of three Great Debates accounts for t...
This thesis develops an approach to international relations and the evaluation of international host...
Designs for peace among nations have abounded throughout the course of history. The most successful ...
This article compares the merits of three concepts — peace, power and security —...
While the discipline of International Relations (IR) has a long tradition of celebrating ‘great thin...
Against any notion of a realist intellectual tradition, pervasive through time and memories, it was ...
Violence and war were ubiquitous features of politics long before the emergence of the modern state ...
Violence and war were ubiquitous features of politics long before the emergence of the modern state ...
Violence and war were ubiquitous features of politics long before the emergence of the modern state ...
The first object of this paper, therefore, is to consider in very general terms the intellectual his...
Can international relations (IR) be a distinctive discipline? In the present paper I argue that such...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Boston University PLEASE NOTE: Boston University Libraries did not receive an Autho...
Classics of international relations introduces, contextualises and assesses 24 of the most important...
Immanuel Kant's Perpetual Peace is widely recognized as a foundational International Relations text....
This paper provides a brief review of almost one century of academic research within the discipline ...
According to International Relations (IR) orthodoxy, the story of three Great Debates accounts for t...
This thesis develops an approach to international relations and the evaluation of international host...
Designs for peace among nations have abounded throughout the course of history. The most successful ...
This article compares the merits of three concepts — peace, power and security —...
While the discipline of International Relations (IR) has a long tradition of celebrating ‘great thin...
Against any notion of a realist intellectual tradition, pervasive through time and memories, it was ...
Violence and war were ubiquitous features of politics long before the emergence of the modern state ...
Violence and war were ubiquitous features of politics long before the emergence of the modern state ...
Violence and war were ubiquitous features of politics long before the emergence of the modern state ...
The first object of this paper, therefore, is to consider in very general terms the intellectual his...
Can international relations (IR) be a distinctive discipline? In the present paper I argue that such...