The Transformation of Foreign Policy
Drawing and Managing Boundaries from Antiquity to the Present
Herausgeber: Hellmann, Gunther; Vec, Milos; Fahrmeir, Andreas
The Transformation of Foreign Policy
Drawing and Managing Boundaries from Antiquity to the Present
Herausgeber: Hellmann, Gunther; Vec, Milos; Fahrmeir, Andreas
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An historically wide-ranging new approach to the study of foreign policy.
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An historically wide-ranging new approach to the study of foreign policy.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Oxford University Press, USA
- Seitenzahl: 318
- Erscheinungstermin: 21. September 2016
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 236mm x 155mm x 23mm
- Gewicht: 590g
- ISBN-13: 9780198783862
- ISBN-10: 0198783868
- Artikelnr.: 47869420
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
- Verlag: Oxford University Press, USA
- Seitenzahl: 318
- Erscheinungstermin: 21. September 2016
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 236mm x 155mm x 23mm
- Gewicht: 590g
- ISBN-13: 9780198783862
- ISBN-10: 0198783868
- Artikelnr.: 47869420
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
Gunther Hellmann is Professor of Political Science in the Department of Social Sciences and Principal Investigator in the Centre of Excellence 'Formation of Normative Orders', both at Goethe University, Frankfurt am Main. His research interests are in the fields of foreign policy analysis, especially German and European foreign policy, international security, esp. transatlantic and European security, and international relations theory. He is one of the editors of Zeitschrift für Internationale Beziehungen (ZIB).; Andreas Fahrmeir is Professor of Modern History at Goethe University, Frankfurt am Main. He is a principal investigator with the 'Normative Orders' research cluster and co-editor of the Historische Zeitschrift.; Milo Vec is Professor of Legal and Constitutional History at the University of Vienna. He is co-editor with Thomas Hippler of Paradoxes of Peace in Nineteenth Century Europe (OUP, 2015).
* 1: Andreas Fahrmeir, Gunther Hellmann and Milo Vec: Introduction
* Part I: Theorizing Foreign Policy: Actorhood and Boundaries
* 2: Gunther Hellman, Andreas Fahrmeir, and Milo Vec: The
Transformation of Foreign Policy: Legal Framework,Historiography, and
Theory
* 3: Gunther Hellmann: Foreign Policy: Concept, Vocabulary, and
Practice
* 4: Milo Vec: Inside/Outside(s): Conceptualizations, Criteria, and
Functions of a Dichotomy in 19th-Century International Legal Doctrine
* Part II: The Governance of Intercommunal Relations in Antiquity
* 5: Hans Beck: Between Demarcation and Integration: The Context of
Foreign Policy in Ancient Greece
* 6: Hartmut Leppin: Aspects of the Christianisation of Foreign Policy
in Late Antiquity: The Impact of Religious Universalism
* Part III: Uncertainty and Transition within the "Westphalian System":
Normative Patterns and Practices between and beyond Sovereign States
* 7: Andreas Fahrmeir: Fragile Boundaries and Personal Actors: The
Nineteenth Century as a Period of Transformation
* 8: Luigi Nuzzo: Spatial and Temporal Dimensions of Legal History:
International Law, Foreign Policy and the Construction of a Legal
Order
* 9: Verena Steller: Back to the Future: Rediscovery of Diplomatic
Conduct and the Moment of Foreign Policy Transformation: Diplomacy
between Versailles and Locarno, 1919-25
* Part IV: Alternative Authorities in Intercommunal Relations and
International Law
* 10: Janne E. Nijman: Renaissance of the City as Global Actor: The
Role of Foreign Policy and International Law Practices in the
Construction of Cities as Global Actors
* 11: Christer Jönsson: States Only?: The Evolution of Diplomacy
* 12: Paul Sharp: Domestic Public Diplomacy, Domestic Diplomacy, and
Domestic Foreign Policy
* Part V: Conclusions
* 13: Gunther Hellman, Andreas Fahrmeir, and Milo Vec: The Multiple
and Changing Purposes of Foreign Policy
* Part I: Theorizing Foreign Policy: Actorhood and Boundaries
* 2: Gunther Hellman, Andreas Fahrmeir, and Milo Vec: The
Transformation of Foreign Policy: Legal Framework,Historiography, and
Theory
* 3: Gunther Hellmann: Foreign Policy: Concept, Vocabulary, and
Practice
* 4: Milo Vec: Inside/Outside(s): Conceptualizations, Criteria, and
Functions of a Dichotomy in 19th-Century International Legal Doctrine
* Part II: The Governance of Intercommunal Relations in Antiquity
* 5: Hans Beck: Between Demarcation and Integration: The Context of
Foreign Policy in Ancient Greece
* 6: Hartmut Leppin: Aspects of the Christianisation of Foreign Policy
in Late Antiquity: The Impact of Religious Universalism
* Part III: Uncertainty and Transition within the "Westphalian System":
Normative Patterns and Practices between and beyond Sovereign States
* 7: Andreas Fahrmeir: Fragile Boundaries and Personal Actors: The
Nineteenth Century as a Period of Transformation
* 8: Luigi Nuzzo: Spatial and Temporal Dimensions of Legal History:
International Law, Foreign Policy and the Construction of a Legal
Order
* 9: Verena Steller: Back to the Future: Rediscovery of Diplomatic
Conduct and the Moment of Foreign Policy Transformation: Diplomacy
between Versailles and Locarno, 1919-25
* Part IV: Alternative Authorities in Intercommunal Relations and
International Law
* 10: Janne E. Nijman: Renaissance of the City as Global Actor: The
Role of Foreign Policy and International Law Practices in the
Construction of Cities as Global Actors
* 11: Christer Jönsson: States Only?: The Evolution of Diplomacy
* 12: Paul Sharp: Domestic Public Diplomacy, Domestic Diplomacy, and
Domestic Foreign Policy
* Part V: Conclusions
* 13: Gunther Hellman, Andreas Fahrmeir, and Milo Vec: The Multiple
and Changing Purposes of Foreign Policy
* 1: Andreas Fahrmeir, Gunther Hellmann and Milo Vec: Introduction
* Part I: Theorizing Foreign Policy: Actorhood and Boundaries
* 2: Gunther Hellman, Andreas Fahrmeir, and Milo Vec: The
Transformation of Foreign Policy: Legal Framework,Historiography, and
Theory
* 3: Gunther Hellmann: Foreign Policy: Concept, Vocabulary, and
Practice
* 4: Milo Vec: Inside/Outside(s): Conceptualizations, Criteria, and
Functions of a Dichotomy in 19th-Century International Legal Doctrine
* Part II: The Governance of Intercommunal Relations in Antiquity
* 5: Hans Beck: Between Demarcation and Integration: The Context of
Foreign Policy in Ancient Greece
* 6: Hartmut Leppin: Aspects of the Christianisation of Foreign Policy
in Late Antiquity: The Impact of Religious Universalism
* Part III: Uncertainty and Transition within the "Westphalian System":
Normative Patterns and Practices between and beyond Sovereign States
* 7: Andreas Fahrmeir: Fragile Boundaries and Personal Actors: The
Nineteenth Century as a Period of Transformation
* 8: Luigi Nuzzo: Spatial and Temporal Dimensions of Legal History:
International Law, Foreign Policy and the Construction of a Legal
Order
* 9: Verena Steller: Back to the Future: Rediscovery of Diplomatic
Conduct and the Moment of Foreign Policy Transformation: Diplomacy
between Versailles and Locarno, 1919-25
* Part IV: Alternative Authorities in Intercommunal Relations and
International Law
* 10: Janne E. Nijman: Renaissance of the City as Global Actor: The
Role of Foreign Policy and International Law Practices in the
Construction of Cities as Global Actors
* 11: Christer Jönsson: States Only?: The Evolution of Diplomacy
* 12: Paul Sharp: Domestic Public Diplomacy, Domestic Diplomacy, and
Domestic Foreign Policy
* Part V: Conclusions
* 13: Gunther Hellman, Andreas Fahrmeir, and Milo Vec: The Multiple
and Changing Purposes of Foreign Policy
* Part I: Theorizing Foreign Policy: Actorhood and Boundaries
* 2: Gunther Hellman, Andreas Fahrmeir, and Milo Vec: The
Transformation of Foreign Policy: Legal Framework,Historiography, and
Theory
* 3: Gunther Hellmann: Foreign Policy: Concept, Vocabulary, and
Practice
* 4: Milo Vec: Inside/Outside(s): Conceptualizations, Criteria, and
Functions of a Dichotomy in 19th-Century International Legal Doctrine
* Part II: The Governance of Intercommunal Relations in Antiquity
* 5: Hans Beck: Between Demarcation and Integration: The Context of
Foreign Policy in Ancient Greece
* 6: Hartmut Leppin: Aspects of the Christianisation of Foreign Policy
in Late Antiquity: The Impact of Religious Universalism
* Part III: Uncertainty and Transition within the "Westphalian System":
Normative Patterns and Practices between and beyond Sovereign States
* 7: Andreas Fahrmeir: Fragile Boundaries and Personal Actors: The
Nineteenth Century as a Period of Transformation
* 8: Luigi Nuzzo: Spatial and Temporal Dimensions of Legal History:
International Law, Foreign Policy and the Construction of a Legal
Order
* 9: Verena Steller: Back to the Future: Rediscovery of Diplomatic
Conduct and the Moment of Foreign Policy Transformation: Diplomacy
between Versailles and Locarno, 1919-25
* Part IV: Alternative Authorities in Intercommunal Relations and
International Law
* 10: Janne E. Nijman: Renaissance of the City as Global Actor: The
Role of Foreign Policy and International Law Practices in the
Construction of Cities as Global Actors
* 11: Christer Jönsson: States Only?: The Evolution of Diplomacy
* 12: Paul Sharp: Domestic Public Diplomacy, Domestic Diplomacy, and
Domestic Foreign Policy
* Part V: Conclusions
* 13: Gunther Hellman, Andreas Fahrmeir, and Milo Vec: The Multiple
and Changing Purposes of Foreign Policy