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This edited volume presents a new, grand and global narrative for international relations history for the pivotal nineteenth century. Typically considered by IR scholars to be largely a long century of relative peace after 1815, the contributors offer a re-conceptualization of patterns of IR, arguing that it was in fact a "bifurcated" century.

Produktbeschreibung
This edited volume presents a new, grand and global narrative for international relations history for the pivotal nineteenth century. Typically considered by IR scholars to be largely a long century of relative peace after 1815, the contributors offer a re-conceptualization of patterns of IR, arguing that it was in fact a "bifurcated" century.


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Autorenporträt
Daniel Green is Associate Professor of Political Science at the University of Delaware. Trained as a comparativist and Africanist, he turned his focus to international relations theory and history in 2004 and was the Founding President of the Historical International Relations (HIST) Section of the International Studies Association in 2012. He is also the on-going organizer of HIST's Nineteenth Century Working Group. He has published in several journals and edited volumes and is the editor of Constructivism and Comparative Politics (2002) and of Guide to the English School in International Studies (2014, with Cornelia Navari). He is currently completing a book project entitled Order Projects and Resistance in the Global Political System: A Framework for International History.