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    After Victory: Institutions, Strategic Restraint, and the Rebuilding of Order After Major Wars (Princeton Studies in International History and Politics)

     
    After Victory: Institutions, Strategic Restraint, and the Rebuilding of Order After Major Wars (Princeton Studies in International History and Politics)

    Description

    "For the third time in this troubled century and following the end of the Cold War and the tragic events in the former Yugoslavia, the world is challenged to create a stable and enduring world order. In this pathbreaking book, Ikenberry draws upon novel theoretical insights and historical experience to determine what policies and strategies work best as the United States attempts to lead in the struggles to create a new world order. . A major contribution to IR theory and to thinking about international order."--Robert Gilpin, Princeton University

    "Through careful, thorough, and subtle analysis of the diplomacy of the post-war settlements of 1815, 1919, 1945, and 1989--91, John Ikenberry addresses in "After Victory" three major questions for the study of world politics: how do major-state victors seek to translate their military success into a sustainable political order; why do secondary-state partners accept the order so constructed by the major victors; and why have post-war settlements become progressively based on institutional principles and practices? In its theoretical boldness, historical sweep, policy relevance, and sheer elegance of analysis and presentation, few books published in the past quarter-century in the field of international relations are the equal of "After Victory.""--Joseph Grieco, Duke University

    ""After Victory" is an extremely important inquiry into the origins of postwar order in international relations--the key analytic and policy issue of our time. Ikenberry's book is unique in its theoretical and empirical sweep. In contrast to realists, for whom international orders are epiphenomenal and transient, and constructivists, who see order emerging fromshared worldviews and norms, Ikenberry adopts a historical sociological framework. He argues that states self-consciously create institutions to bind themselves and others in international orders that reduce the 'returns to power'."--David A. Lake, University of California, Sa

    Product details

    EAN/ISBN:
    9780691050911
    Medium:
    Paperback
    Number of pages:
    320
    Publication date:
    2000-10-16
    Publisher:
    Princeton Univ Pr
    Languages:
    english
    EAN/ISBN:
    9780691050911
    Medium:
    Paperback
    Number of pages:
    320
    Publication date:
    2000-10-16
    Publisher:
    Princeton Univ Pr
    Languages:
    english

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