This book provides an introduction to, and analysis of, the English School's changing and often somewhat indistinct views on International Relations as they developed from the 1950s onwards. It focuses on key thinkers and texts and turning points and moves our understanding of the English School beyond the past work of the British Committee and the more recent work of Buzan et. al. to offer a comprehensive overview and interrogation from the leading lights of this arm of International Relations thought.
This volume is one of the cornerstones of the EISA's Trends in European IR Theory series complementing the volumes on International Political Theory, Liberalism, Realism, International Political Economy, the post-positivist tradition, and Feminism published for the centenary of IR as a discipline.
Cornelia Navari is Visiting Professor of International Affairs at the University of Buckingham, UK.
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"This book displays the core themes and contributions of the English ... . It reads like a state of the art of English School research and serves as a window to the past two decades' worth of research teams and working groups within this theoretical tradition. ... This makes for an engaging read for students and scholars ... .[This book] will certainly serve as a reminder of the former, and a stimulus for the latter." (Filippo Costa Buranelli, International Affairs, Vol. 98 (6), 2022)