Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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Books | Central Library General Section | 327.101 ARM (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 029061 |
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327.101 ACH Rethinking power, institutions and ideas in world politics : | 327.101 ACK Feminist methodologies for international relations / | 327.101 AME Cities and global governance : | 327.101 ARM Foundations of modern international thought / | 327.101 ARO Peace & war : | 327.101 AYE Gramsci, political economy, and international relations theory : | 327.101 BAR Power in global governance / |
Machine generated contents note: Introduction: rethinking the foundations of modern international thought; Part I. Historiographical Foundations: 1. The international turn in intellectual history; 2. Is there a pre-history of globalisation?; 3. The elephant and the whale: empires and oceans in world history; Part II. Seventeenth-Century Foundations: Hobbes and Locke: 4. Hobbes and the foundations of modern international thought; 5. John Locke's international thought; 6. John Locke, Carolina and the Two Treatises of Government; 7. John Locke: theorist of empire?; Part III. Eighteenth-Century Foundations: 8. Parliament and international law in eighteenth-century Britain; 9. Edmund Burke and Reason of State; 10. Globalising Jeremy Bentham; Part IV. Building on the Foundations: Making States since 1776: 11. The Declaration of Independence and international law; 12. Declarations of independence, 1776-2012.
"Between the early seventeenth and mid-nineteenth centuries, major European political thinkers first began to look outside their national borders and envisage a world of competitive, equal sovereign states inhabiting an international sphere that ultimately encompassed the whole globe. In this insightful and wide-ranging work, David Armitage - one of the world's leading historians of political thought - traces the genesis of this international turn in intellectual history. Foundations of Modern International Thought combines important methodological essays, which consider the genealogy of globalisation and the parallel histories of empires and oceans, with fresh considerations of leading figures such as Hobbes, Locke, Burke and Bentham in the history of international thought. The culmination of more than a decade's reflection and research on these issues, this book restores the often overlooked international dimensions to intellectual history and recovers the intellectual dimensions of international history"--
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