05005cam a2200349Ma 4500001001300000003000600013005001700019006001900036007001500055008004100070020002800111020001500139020003100154020001500185035004000200040002400240050001600264100001900280245012800299250002100427250002000448264003000468300006900498505359800567648002104165650002904186650002604215700010504241776005804346856017004404856008104574on1190694289OCoLC20241217081121.0m d cr |||||||||||150602t20152015maua fo 000 0 eng d a9781292070889q(e-book) a1292070889 a9781292070872q(paperback) a1292070870 a(OCoLC)1190694289z(OCoLC)965519261 bengcGAFCSC LIBRARY 4aJZ1242b.A71 aArt, Robert J.10aInternational politicsh[electronic resource] :benduring concepts and contemporary issues /cRobert J. Art, Robert Jervis. aTwelfth edition. aGlobal edition. 1aBoston :bPearson,c2015. a1 online resource (511 pages :)billustrations (black and white)00tThe Melian dialogue /rThucydides --tLegitimacy on international politics /rIan Hurd --tSix principles of political realism /rHans J. Morgenthau --tA critique of Morgenthau's Principles of political realism /rJ. Ann Tickner --tThe anarchic structure of world politics /rKenneth N. Waltz --tRationalist explanations of war /rJames D. Fearon --tAnarchy is what states make of it /rAlexander Wendt --tThe conditions for cooperation in world politics /rKenneth A. Oye --tOffense, defense, and the security dilemma /rRobert Jervis --tKant, liberal legacies, and foreign affairs /rMichael W. Doyle --tAlliances : balancing and bandwagoning /rStephen M. Walt --tHierarchy and hegemony in international politics /rDavid C. Kang --tThe future of diplomacy /rHans J. Morgenthau --tThe uses and limits of international law /rStanley Hoffmann --tInternational institutions : can interdependence work? /rRobert O. Keohane --tThe four functions of force /rRobert J. Art --tThe diplomacy of violence /rThomas C. Schelling --tWhat is terrorism? /rBruce Hoffman --tThe fungibility of force /rRobert J. Art --tWhy civil resistance works /rErica Chenoweth and Maria Stephan --tThe shape of violence today /rThe World Bank --tWhy Iran should get the bomb /rKenneth N. Waltz --tGetting ready for a nuclear-ready Iran /rHenry Sokolski --tThe nature of political economy /rRobert Gilpin --tThe domestic sources of foreign economic policies /rMichael J. Hiscox --tWhy doesn't everyone get the case for free trade? /rDani Rodrik --tGlobalization of the economy /rJeffrey Frankel --tWhy the world isn't flat /rPankaj Ghemawat --tWhat globalization is and is not /rMois�es Na�im --tA sane globalization /rDani Rodrik --tThe Western slump and global reorganization /rRobert H. Wade --tThe era of leading power peace /rRobert Jervis --tThe United States and the rise of China /rRobert J. Art --tEnding terrorism /rAudrey Cronin --tDealing with the current terrorist threat /rBarack Obame --tReflections on intervention /rKofi Annan --tHumanitarian intervention comes of age /rJohn Western and Joshua S. Goldstein --tThe true costs of humanitarian intervention /rBenjamin A. Valentino --tTo the shores of Tripoli? Regime change and its consequences /rAlexander B. Downes --tCrafting peace through power sharing /rCaroline A. Hartzell and Matthew Hoddie --tHuman rights in world politics /rRhoda E. Howard and Jack Donnelly --tInternational law : the trials of global norms /rStephen R. Ratner --tTransnational activist networks /rMargaret E. Keck and Kathryn Sikkink --tTransnational organized crime and the state /rPhil Williams --tCyber conflict and national security /rHerbert Lin --tThe tragedy of the commons /rGarrett Hardin --tThe climate change threat we can beat /rDavid G. Victor, Charles F. Kennel, and Veerabhadran Ramanathan --tThe United Nations and international security /rAdam Roberts --tGlobalization and governance /rKenneth N. Waltz --tThe future of the liberal world order /rJohn Ikenberry --tIndividual empowerment and demographic patterns /rThe U.S. National Intelligence Council --tEmerging multipolarity : why should we care? /rBarry Posen --tThe strategic implications of climate change /rAlan Dupont --tThe inevitable superpower : why China's dominance is a sure thing /rArvind Subramanian --tDollar diminution and U.S. power /rJonathan Kirshner --tPower shifts, economic change, and the decline of the West? /rMichael Cox --tA world without nuclear weapons /rThomas C. Schelling. 7aSince 19892fast 0aInternational relations. 0aWorld politicsy1989-1 aJervis, Robert,d1940-2021,eauthor.1https://id.oclc.org/worldcat/entity/E39PBJmP3H7KdyVtYp69kd9Rrq08cOriginalz9781292070872z1292070870w(OCoLC)88835122640uhttp://www.vlebooks.com/vleweb/product/openreader?id=Exeter&isbn=9781292070889zAvailable online via VLEbooks. Please log in using your Exeter IT login, if prompted.40uhttp://www.vlebooks.com/vleweb/product/openreader?id=none&isbn=9781292070889