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| VOLUME 1 |
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| Part 1: Historical Development |
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| Historical Overview |
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| Theories of Foreign Policy: An Historical Overview |
Steve Smith |
| Classical Realism |
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| A Realist Theory of International Politics |
Hans Morgenthau |
| The Pole of Power and the Pole of Indifference |
Arnold Wolfers |
| Challenging Realism |
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| The United States Decision to Resist Aggression in Korea: The Application of an Analytical Scheme |
Richard Snyder and Glenn Paige |
| Conceptual Models and the Cuban Missile Crisis |
Graham Allison |
| Comparative Foreign Policy Analysis |
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| Pre-Theories and Theories of Foreign Policy |
James Rosenau |
| The Evolution and Future of Theoretical Research in the Comparative Study of Foreign Policy |
Charles Hermann and Gregory Peacock |
| Cognitive, Psychological and Decision-making Approaches |
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| National Role Conceptions in the Study of Foreign Policy |
Kalevi Holsti |
| Cognitive Dynamics and Images of the Enemy |
Ole Holsti |
| The Causal Nexus Between Cognitive Beliefs and Decision Making Behaviour: The 'Operational Code' Belief System |
Alexander George |
| Explaining Foreign Policy Behaviour Using Personal Characteristics of Political Leaders |
Margaret Hermann |
| Who Makes Foreign Policy Decisions and How: An Empirical Inquiry |
Margaret Hermann and Charles Hermann |
| VOLUME 2 |
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| Domestic-international linkages |
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| International Relations and Domestic Structures: Foreign Economic Policies of Advanced Industrial States |
Peter Katzenstein |
| Diplomacy and Domestic Politics: The Logic of Two-Level Games |
Robert Putnam |
| Foreign Policy and Identity |
David Campbell |
| Part2I: Current Theoretical Approaches to Foreign Policy Analysis |
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| Neorealism |
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| Horses for Courses: Why Not Neo-Realist Theories of Foreign Policy? |
Colin Elman |
| Neorealist foreign policy theory |
Rainer Baumann, Volker Rittberger and Wolfgang Wagner |
| Neoliberalism |
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| Achieving Cooperation Under Anarchy: Strategies and Institutions |
Robert Axelrod and Robert Keohane |
| Assessing State Preferences and Explaining Institutional Choice: The Case of Intra-German Trade |
Michael Z rn |
| Organizational Processes |
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| Organizational Routines and the Outbreak of War |
Jack Levy |
| Social Constructivism |
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| Constructing National Interests |
Jutta Weldes |
| Constructivism at Home: Theory and Method |
Ted Hopf |
| VOLUME 3 |
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| Discursive Approaches |
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| Foreign Policy as a Social Construction: A Post-Positivist Analysis of U.S. Counterinsurgency Policy in the Philippines |
Roxanne Lynn Doty |
| European Integration and Security: Analysing French and German Discourses on State, Nation and Europe |
Ole Wæver |
| Neo-classical Realism |
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| Neoclassical Realism and Theories of Foreign Policy |
Gideon Rose |
| Introduction: Neoclassical Realism, the State, and Foreign Policy |
Jeffrey Taliaferro, Steven Lobell and Norrin Ripsman |
| Liberalism |
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| Resisting the Protectionist Temptation: Industry and the Making of Trade Policy in France and the United States during the 1970s |
Helen Milner |
| Taking Preferences Seriously: A Liberal Theory of International Politics |
Andrew Moravcsik |
| Bureaucratic Politics |
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| Policy Preferences and Bureaucratic Position: The Case of the American Hostage Rescue Mission |
Steve Smith |
| Understanding and Evaluating Bureaucratic Politics: The Nexus between Political Leaders and Advisory Systems |
Thomas Preston and Paul 't Hart |
| Cognitive and Psychological Approaches |
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| Political learning by doing: Gorbachev as Uncommitted Thinker and Motivated Learner |
Janice Gross Stein |
| Understanding Beliefs |
Robert Jervis |
| VOLUME 4 |
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| Interpretive actor approaches |
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| "Let's Argue!": Communicative Action in World Politics |
Thomas Risse |
| The Power Politics of Identity |
Janice Bially-Mattern |
| Synthetic approaches |
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| Foreign Policy Analysis: Actor-Specific Theory and the Ground of International Relations |
Valerie Hudson |
| Reinvigorating the Study of Foreign Policy Decision Making: Towards a Constructivist Approach |
David Patrick Houghton |
| Part 3: Problems and Debates in Contemporary Foreign Policy Analysis |
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| General Methodological and Meta-Theoretical Issues |
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| The Agency-Structure Problem in Foreign Policy Analysis |
Walter Carlsnaes |
| The Study of Discourse in International Relations: A Critique of Research and Methods |
Jennifer Milliken |
| Counterfactual thought Experiments |
Richard Ned Lebow |
| Sex and Death in the Rational World of Defence Intellectuals |
Carol Cohn |
| VOLUME 5 |
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| The Role of Ideas |
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| Ideas and Foreign Policy: An Analytical Framework |
Judith Goldstein and Robert Keohane |
| The Causal Effects of Ideas on Politics |
Albert Yee |
| Beyond Belief: Ideas and Symbolic Technologies in the Study of International Relations |
Mark Laffey and Jutta Weldes |
| Psychology, Sociology and Identity |
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| Leaders' National Identity Conceptions and Nuclear Choice |
Jacques Hymans |
| Social Psychology and the Identity-Conflict Debate: Is a 'China Threat' Inevitable? |
Peter Hays Gries |
| The Sociology of New Thinking: Elites, Identity change, and the End of the Cold War |
Robert English |
| Cognition and Emotions |
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| The Feeling of Rationality: The Meaning of Neuroscientific Advances for Political Science |
Rose McDermott |
| Emotional Beliefs |
Jonathan Mercer |
| You Dissin me? Humiliation and post 9/11 global politics |
Paul Saurette |
| The ethics of foreign policy |
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| The Responsibilities of Victory: Jus post Bellum and the Just War |
Alex Bellamy |
| "Assisting" the Global Poor |
Thomas Pogge |
| The Problem of Global Justice Umber |
Thomas Nagel |