Part of the "Longman Classics in Political Science" Series, this highly readable and respected book balances history and theory to give international politics students a framework for analyzing the past and using it to understand the issues confronting us today.
Part of the "Longman Classics" series, Nye's Understanding International Conflicts has been completely updated and features a new Foreword by Stanley Hoffman. A book that students enjoy reading, Nye's volume deftly balances theory and history to help students develop a well-rounded is a book that students enjoy reading, Nye's volume deftly balances theory and history to help students develop a well-rounded, informed framework for analyzing current issues and dilemmas. Updated with the most recent scholarship and replete with illustrative examples, the Fourth Edition explores the international issues confronting us at the beginning of the 21st Century. Understanding International Conflicts aims to provide students with the conceptual tools that will help them shape their own answers to the unfolding developments in our world long after exams are done.
1. Is there an Enduring Logic of Conflict in World Politics?
2. Origins of the Great Twentieth-Century Conflicts.
3. Balance of Power and World War I.
4. The Failure of Collective Security and World War II.
5. The Cold War.
6. Intervention, Institutions, and Regional Conflicts.
7. Interdependence and Globalization.
8. The Information Age.
9. A New World Order?