Where does international order come from? How is it established and maintained? Why does it break down? With every sovereign state its own master, how can order prevail? Answering these questions in a briskly paced, systematic survey, Stephen Kocs explores the rise and fall of successive international systems across the centuries―from the dynastic institutions of Renaissance Europe, to the power-politics systems of eighteenth- and nineteenth-century Europe, to the liberal international systems of the contemporary world.https://crossworks.holycross.edu/hc_books/1037/thumbnail.jp
The pursuit of something called “world order” has been an almost ever-present feature of Western — m...
The pursuit of something called “world order” has been an almost ever-present feature of Western — m...
European identity; Europeanization; Nation-state; neo-institutionalism; political science; instituti...
There is a persistent gap between the abstract concepts elites use to understand the elements of int...
There is a persistent gap between the abstract concepts elites use to understand the elements of int...
Students of international organization try to understand how and when international political orders...
This article contributes a step towards the consolidation of the wide-ranging intellectual history a...
This article contributes a step towards the consolidation of the wide-ranging intellectual history a...
What kind of world order is now emerging? There are several different suggestions in the debate and ...
What accounted for the transformation of historic international orders such as that of medieval Lati...
Order needs an ideational foundation that provides it with legitimacy. Most scholars writing on inte...
How political order sustains and is constructed is a fundamental problem in the social sciences, and...
In this final chapter of Part Two, the author addresses arguably the central stumbling block for tho...
The establishment and maintenance of order—that is, of settled rules and arrangements that regulate ...
In the first two chapters of this thesis I outline a theoretical approach to international society a...
The pursuit of something called “world order” has been an almost ever-present feature of Western — m...
The pursuit of something called “world order” has been an almost ever-present feature of Western — m...
European identity; Europeanization; Nation-state; neo-institutionalism; political science; instituti...
There is a persistent gap between the abstract concepts elites use to understand the elements of int...
There is a persistent gap between the abstract concepts elites use to understand the elements of int...
Students of international organization try to understand how and when international political orders...
This article contributes a step towards the consolidation of the wide-ranging intellectual history a...
This article contributes a step towards the consolidation of the wide-ranging intellectual history a...
What kind of world order is now emerging? There are several different suggestions in the debate and ...
What accounted for the transformation of historic international orders such as that of medieval Lati...
Order needs an ideational foundation that provides it with legitimacy. Most scholars writing on inte...
How political order sustains and is constructed is a fundamental problem in the social sciences, and...
In this final chapter of Part Two, the author addresses arguably the central stumbling block for tho...
The establishment and maintenance of order—that is, of settled rules and arrangements that regulate ...
In the first two chapters of this thesis I outline a theoretical approach to international society a...
The pursuit of something called “world order” has been an almost ever-present feature of Western — m...
The pursuit of something called “world order” has been an almost ever-present feature of Western — m...
European identity; Europeanization; Nation-state; neo-institutionalism; political science; instituti...