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    The Invention of International Relations Theory: Realism, the Rockefeller Foundation, and the 1954 Conference on Theory

    The Invention of International Relations Theory: Realism, the Rockefeller Foundation, and the 1954 Conference on Theory

    by Nicolas Guilhot (Editor)


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      ISBN-13: 9780231526449
    • Publisher: Columbia University Press
    • Publication date: 02/05/2011
    • Sold by: Barnes & Noble
    • Format: eBook
    • Pages: 368
    • File size: 785 KB

    Nicolas Guilhot is senior research associate at the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique and the author of The Democracy Makers: Human Rights and the Politics of Global Order.

    Table of Contents

    Acknowledgments
    Introduction: One Discipline, Many Histories, by Nicolas Guilhot
    1. Morality, Policy, and Theory: Reflections on the 1954 Conference, by Robert Jervis
    2. Tensions Within Realism: 1954 and After, by Jack Snyder
    3. The Rockefeller Foundation Conference and the Long Road to a Theory of International Politics, by Brian C. Schmidt
    4. The Speech Act of Realism: The Move That Made IR, by Ole Wæver
    5. The Realist Gambit: Postwar American Political Science and the Birth of IR Theory, by Nicolas Guilhot
    6. Kennan: Realism as Desire, by Anders Stephanson
    7. American Hegemony, the Rockefeller Foundation, and the Rise of Academic International Relations in the United States, by Inderjeet Parmar
    8. Realism and Neoliberalism: From Reactionary Modernism to Postwar Conservatism, by Philip Mirowski
    Appendix 1. Conference on International Politics, May 7–8, 1954
    Appendix 2. The Theoretical and Practical Importance of a Theory of International Relations, by Hans J. Morgenthau
    Appendix 3. The Moral Issue in International Relations, by Reinhold Niebuhr
    Appendix 4. International Relations Theory and Areas of Choice in Foreign Policy, by William T.R. Fox
    Appendix 5. The Implications of Theory for Practice in the Conduct of Foreign Affairs, by Paul Nitze
    Appendix 6. Theory of International Politics: Its Merits and Advancement, by Arnold Wolfers
    List of Contributors
    Index

    What People are Saying About This

    Michael Cox

    An outstanding collection by top-drawer scholars that adds enormously to a growing literature on the evolution of a much misunderstood academic field. What emerges is a story altogether more complex—and far more interesting—than we had been told about a subject whose history has been shrouded in myth, simplification, and plain misrepresentation. A volume that will surely redefine our understanding of the intellectual history of international relations theory, its relationship with power, and the central part played by such giants as Morgenthau, Nitze, Wolfers, Fox, and Niebuhr.

    John G. Gunnell

    An important contribution to an authentic understanding of the origins and evolution of the field of international relations as well as to the history of political science as a whole. It also represents a significant advance in the study of disciplinary and intellectual history.

    Samuel Moyn

    Indispensable. While this volume will be widely read, cited, and assigned within the discipline, it will also be important in American and world intellectual history and in the critical history of ideas about world organization and world politics.

    John J. Mearsheimer

    Fascinating insights. Scholars of all stripes should read this carefully. It will help them better understand how they think about the world and might even help them refine theories of how states interact with one another.

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    The 1954 Conference on Theory, sponsored by the Rockefeller Foundation, featured a "who's who" of scholars and practitioners debating what would become the foundations of international relations theory. Assembling his own team of experts, all of whom have struggled with the legacy of this conference, Nicolas Guilhot revisits a seminal event in the discipline and its odd rejection of scientific rationalism.

    Far from being a spontaneous development, these essays argue, the emergence of a "realist" approach to international politics, later codified at the conference, was deliberately triggered by the Rockefeller Foundation. The organization was an early advocate of scholars who opposed the idea of a "science" of politics, pursuing, for the sake of disciplinary autonomy, a vision of politics as a pre-rational and existential dimension of the human condition that could not be "solved" by scientific means. As a result, the nascent theory was more a rejection of behavioral social science than one of its specialized branches. The archived conversations reproduced here for the first time, as well as some unpublished papers by Hans Morgenthau, Reinhold Niebuhr, Paul Nitze, and others, speak to this defensive stance. International relations theory is therefore critically linked to the context of postwar liberalism, and contributors explore how these origins have played out in political thought and American foreign policy.

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