Inventing international society : a history of the English school

Bibliographic Information

Inventing international society : a history of the English school

Tim Dunne

(St. Antony's series)

Macmillan Press , St. Martin's Press in association with St. Antony's College, Oxford, 1998

  • : uk : hbk
  • : uk : pbk
  • : us : cloth

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Note

Bibliography: p. 193-202

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Inventing International Society is a narrative history of the English School of International Relations. After E.H. Carr departed from academic international relations in the late 1940s, Martin Wight became the most theoretically innovative scholar in the discipline. Wight found an institutional setting for his ideas in The British Committee, a group which Herbert Butterfield inaugurated in 1959. The book argues that this date should be regarded as the origin of a distinctive English School of International Relations. In addition to tracing the history of the School, the book argues that later English School scholars, such as Hedley Bull and R.J.Vincent, made a significant contribution to the new normative thinking in International Relations.

Table of Contents

Preface Introduction The English School E.H.Carr Martin Wight Herbert Butterfield The British Committee I The British Committee II Hedley Bull R.J.Vincent Conclusion Bibliography Index

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