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| Foreword | p. xi |
| Preface | p. xiii |
| Resources | p. xvii |
| Is There an Enduring Logic of Conflict in World Politics? | p. 1 |
| What is International Politics? | p. 2 |
| Differing Views of Anarchic Politics | p. 4 |
| Building Blocks | p. 9 |
| The Peloponnesian War | p. 13 |
| A Short Version of a Long Story | p. 13 |
| Causes and Theories | p. 1... MORE |
| Inevitability and the Shadow of the Future | p. 18 |
| Ethical Questions and International Politics | p. 21 |
| Limits on Ethics in International Relations | p. 22 |
| Three Views of the Role of Morality | p. 23 |
| Chronology: Peloponnesian Wars | p. 29 |
| Study Questions | p. 30 |
| Selected Readings | p. 30 |
| Further Readings | p. 30 |
| Notes | p. 32 |
| Origins of the Great Twentieth-Century Conflicts | p. 34 |
| International Systems and Levels of Causation | p. 34 |
| Levels of Analysis | p. 36 |
| Systems: Structure and Process | p. 38 |
| Revolutionary and Moderate Goals and Instruments | p. 39 |
| The Structure and Process of the Nineteenth-Century System | p. 41 |
| A Modern Sequel | p. 43 |
| Domestic Politics and Foreign Policy | p. 44 |
| Liberalism Revived | p. 46 |
| Liberal Democracy and War | p. 48 |
| Defining National Interests | p. 50 |
| Variations in Foreign Policies | p. 51 |
| Counterfactuals | p. 52 |
| Plausibility | p. 53 |
| Proximity in Time | p. 53 |
| Relation to Theory | p. 54 |
| Facts | p. 54 |
| Chronologies: Europe | p. 55 |
| Study Questions | p. 57 |
| Selected Readings | p. 57 |
| Further Readings | p. 58 |
| Notes | p. 59 |
| Balance of Power and World War I | p. 60 |
| Balance of Power | p. 60 |
| Power | p. 61 |
| Balances as Distributions of Power | p. 65 |
| Balance of Power as Policy | p. 66 |
| Balance of Power as Multipolar Systems | p. 68 |
| Alliances | p. 70 |
| The Origins of World War I | p. 71 |
| Three Levels of Analysis | p. 71 |
| Was War Inevitable? | p. 77 |
| What Kind of War? | p. 80 |
| The Funnel of Choices | p. 82 |
| Lessons of History Again | p. 83 |
| Chronology: The Road to World War I | p. 84 |
| Study Questions | p. 85 |
| Selected Readings | p. 85 |
| Further Readings | p. 85 |
| Notes | p. 87 |
| The Failure of Collective Security and World War II | p. 88 |
| The Rise and Fall of Collective Security | p. 88 |
| The League of Nations | p. 89 |
| The United States and the League of Nations | p. 91 |
| The Early Days of the League | p. 92 |
| The Manchurian Failure | p. 95 |
| The Ethiopian Debacle | p. 96 |
| The Origins of World War II | p. 97 |
| Hitler's War? | p. 97 |
| Hitler's Strategy | p. 99 |
| The Role of the Individual | p. 103 |
| Systemic and Domestic Causes | p. 104 |
| Was War Inevitable? | p. 105 |
| The Pacific War | p. 107 |
| Appeasement and Two Types of War | p. 111 |
| Chronology: Between the World Wars | p. 112 |
| Study Questions | p. 113 |
| Selected Readings | p. 114 |
| Further Readings | p. 114 |
| Notes | p. 115 |
| The Cold War | p. 116 |
| Deterrence and Containment | p. 117 |
| Three Approaches to the Cold War | p. 118 |
| Roosevelt's Policies | p. 120 |
| Stalin's Policies | p. 121 |
| Phases of the Conflict | p. 122 |
| Inevitability? | p. 128 |
| Levels of Analysis | p. 129 |
| U.S. and Soviet Goals in the Cold War | p. 131 |
| Containment | p. 132 |
| The Vietnam War | p. 133 |
| Motives, Means, and Consequences | p. 134 |
| Chronology: American Involvement in Vietnam (1954-1975) | p. 135 |
| The Rest of the Cold War | p. 138 |
| The End of the Cold War | p. 140 |
| The Role of Nuclear Weapons | p. 145 |
| Physics and Politics | p. 145 |
| Balance of Terror | p. 148 |
| Problems of Nuclear Deterrence | p. 149 |
| The Cuban Missile Crisis | p. 151 |
| Moral Issues | p. 153 |
| Chronology: The Cold War Years | p. 156 |
| Study Questions | p. 160 |
| Selected Readings | p. 161 |
| Further Readings | p. 161 |
| Notes | p. 162 |
| Conflicts after the Cold War - Interventions and Institutions | p. 163 |
| Ethnic Conflicts | p. 164 |
| Intervention and Sovereignty | p. 166 |
| Defining Intervention | p. 166 |
| Sovereignty | p. 168 |
| Judging Intervention | p. 169 |
| Exceptions to the Rule | p. 170 |
| Problems of Self-Determination | p. 171 |
| International Law and Organization | p. 173 |
| Domestic Analogies | p. 173 |
| Predictability and Legitimacy | p. 175 |
| United Nations: Collective Security and Peacekeeping | p. 176 |
| Conflicts in the Middle East | p. 182 |
| The Questions of Nationalism | p. 183 |
| The Arab-Israeli Conflicts | p. 185 |
| The Conflicts in the Persian Gulf of 1991 and 2003 | p. 192 |
| Chronology: The Arab-Israeli Conflict | p. 196 |
| Study Questions | p. 199 |
| Selected Readings | p. 199 |
| Further Readings | p. 200 |
| Notes | p. 201 |
| Globalization and Interdependence | p. 202 |
| The Dimensions of Globalization | p. 203 |
| What's New about Twenty-First-Century Globalization? | p. 205 |
| Political Reactions to Globalization | p. 207 |
| Power and Interdependence | p. 208 |
| The Concept of Interdependence | p. 208 |
| Sources of Interdependence | p. 209 |
| Benefits of Interdependence | p. 210 |
| Costs of Interdependence | p. 211 |
| Symmetry of Interdependence | p. 213 |
| Leadership and Institutions in the World Economy | p. 216 |
| Realism and Complex Interdependence | p. 220 |
| The Politics of Oil | p. 221 |
| Oil as a Power Resource | p. 225 |
| Study Questions | p. 226 |
| Selected Readings | p. 227 |
| Further Readings | p. 227 |
| Notes | p. 229 |
| Information Revolution and Transnational Actors | p. 231 |
| Power and the Information Revolution | p. 231 |
| Lessons from the Past | p. 231 |
| A New World Politics? | p. 235 |
| Sovereignty and Control | p. 239 |
| Transnational Actors | p. 242 |
| Nongovernmental Organizations (NGOs) | p. 245 |
| The Information Revolution and Complex Interdependence | p. 248 |
| Conclusions | p. 251 |
| Study Questions | p. 252 |
| Selected Readings | p. 252 |
| Further Readings | p. 253 |
| Notes | p. 254 |
| A New World Order? | p. 256 |
| Alternative Designs for the Future | p. 256 |
| The End of History or the Clash of Civilizations? | p. 261 |
| Technology and the Diffusion of Power | p. 263 |
| Proliferation of Weapons of Mass Destruction | p. 265 |
| Transnational Challenges to Security | p. 267 |
| A New World Order? | p. 276 |
| Future Configurations of Power | p. 277 |
| The Prison of Old Concepts | p. 280 |
| The Evolution of a Hybrid World Order | p. 282 |
| Thinking About the Future | p. 284 |
| Study Questions | p. 285 |
| Selected Readings | p. 286 |
| Further Readings | p. 286 |
| Notes | p. 288 |
| Glossary | p. 289 |
| Credits | p. 293 |
| Index | p. 295 |
| Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved. |