VOLUME I: THE INTERNATIONAL SYSTEMS 1815-1945
Section 1: Balance of Power? The 19th century international order
Did the Vienna Settlement Rest on a Balance of Power? - Paul W. Schroeder
The 19th Century International System: Changes in the Structure - Paul W. Schroeder
A.J.P. Taylor's International System - Paul W. Schroeder
Paul Schroeder's International System: The View From Vienna - H. M. Scott
The Theoretical Foundations of Paul W. Schroeder's International System - Jack S. Levy
The European State System in the Modern World - Alan Sked
Section 2: From Order to War: 1914
The First World War and the International Power System - Paul M. Kennedy
Perceptions of the Security Dilemma in 1914 - Jack L. Snyder
Why Cooperation Failed in 1914 - Steven van Evera
Perceptions of Power - William C. Wohlforth
Russia in the Balance of Power pre-1914
The Elusive Explanation - Peter Gellman
Balance of Power "Theory" and the Origins of World War I
Section 3: The Twenty Years' Crisis: 1919-1939
The Great Powers and the New International System: 1919-1923 - Carole Fink
Is There a New International History of the 1920s? - Jon Jacobson
The Twenty Years Crisis, 1919-1939: Why a Concert Didn't Arise - Randall L. Schweller
Deterrence in 1939 - Alan S. Alexandroff and Richard Rosecrance
Political Science Perspectives - Robert Jervis
New Perspectives on Appeasement: Some Implications for International Relations - J.L. Richardson
The Two Postwar Eras and the Conditions for Stability in Twentieth-Century Western Europe - Charles S. Maier
VOLUME II: THE RISE AND FALL OF THE COLD WAR
Section 1: The Cold War as a System
Was the Cold War a Security Dilemma? - Robert Jervis
Ideology and the Cold War - Mark Kramer
The Rise and Fall of the Cold War in Comparative Perspective - Richard Ned Lebow
The Cold War: What Do "We Now Know"?' - Melvyn P. Leffler
Section 2: Prediction and the End of the Cold War
The Future as Arbiter of Theoretical Controversies - James Lee Ray and Bruce Russett
Predictions, Explanations and the End of the Cold War
The End of the Cold War - Bruce Bueno de Mesquita
Predicting an Emerging Property
The End of the Cold War and Why We Failed to Predict It - Michael Cox
Section 3: Explaining the End of the Cold War
Soviet Reform and the End of the Cold War - Daniel Deudney and G. John Ikenberry
Explaining Large-Scale Historical Change
The Long Peace, the End of the Cold War and the Failure of Realism - Richard Ned Lebow
China as a Factor in the Collapse of the Soviet Empire - Nancy Bernkopf Tucker
Reagan, Gorbachev and the Emergence of "New Political Thinking" - Robert G. Patman
Human Rights Ideas, the Demise of Communism, and the End of the Cold War - Daniel C. Thomas
Power, Globalization and the End of the Cold War - Stephen G. Brooks and William C. Wohlforth
Power, Ideas, and New Evidence on the Cold War's End - Robert D English
A Reply to Brooks and Wohlforth
Explaining the End of the Cold War - Jeremi Suri
A New Historical Consensus
VOLUME III: THE UNITED STATES: FROM SUPERPOWER TO EMPIRE
Section 1: Superpower
The "Lion in the Path": the US Emergence as a World Power - Walter Lafeber
The Making of Pax Americana - Charles S. Maier
Formative Movements of United States Ascendancy
The Nature of World Power in American History - Donald W. White
An Evaluation at the End of World War II
Rethinking the Origins of American Hegemony - G. John Ikenberry
Section 2: Hegemonic Decline?
The Mysterious Case of Vanishing Hegemony; Or, Is Mark Twain Really Dead? - Bruce Russett
American Hegemony - Stephen Gill
Its Limits and Prospects in the Reagan Era
The Persistent Myth of Lost Hegemony - Susan Strange
The U.S. - Decline or Renewal? - Samuel P. Huntington
American Decline and the Great Debate - Michael H. Hunt
a Historical Perspective
Section 3: Unipolarity
The Unipolar Moment - Charles Krauthammer
The Unipolar Illusion - Christopher Layne
Why New Great Powers Will Rise
Still the American Century - Bruce Cumings
Whatever Happened to American Decline? - Michael Cox
International Relations and the New United States Hegemony'
Section 4: Empire?
A Most Interesting Empire - Anders Stephanson
The Empire's back in Town - Michael Cox
or America's Imperial Temptation Again
American power and the Empire of Capitalist Democracy - G. John Ikenberry
New Rome - Andrew J Bacevich
New Jerusalem
In Defense of Empires - Deepak Lal
VOLUME IV: GLOBALIZATION
Section 1:
Restarting Globalization after World War II - Shale Horowitz
Structure, Coalitions, and the Cold War
Globalization and the End of the Old Order? - David Held and Anthony McGrew
Globalization and the Prospects for World Order
The Globalization Challenge - James Mittelman
Surviving at the Margins
Has Globalization ended the Rise and Rise of the Nation-State? - Michael Mann
Global Markets and National Politics - Geoffrey Garrett
Collision Course or Virtuous Circle?
Understanding Late-Twentieth-Century Capitalism - Don D. Marshall
Reassessing the Globalization Theme
Section 2: Globalization: Myths
The Myth of the 'Global' Economy - John Zysman
Enduring National Foundations and Emerging Regional Realities
Globalization and the Myth of the Powerless State - Linda Weiss
The Global Economy - Myths and Realities - Paul Q. Hirst
Section 3: Globalization and International Relations
Beyond the Great Divide - Ian Clark
Globalization and the Theory of International Relations
Globalization and the Study of International Security - Victor D. Cha
Global Capitalism and the State - Jan Aart Scholte
The Westfailure System - Susan Strange
Section 4: Globalization: Challenges
How Far will International Economic Integration go? - Dani Rodrik
Can Democracy Survive Globalization? - Benjamin R. Barber
Is Globalization Reducing Poverty and Inequality? - Robert Hunter Wade
Disaggregated Sovereignty - Anne-Marie Slaughter
Towards the Public Accountability of Global Government Networks
Sinking Globalization - Niall Ferguson
From Sarajevo to September 11 - the Future of Globalization - John Micklethwait and Adrian Wooldridge
Behind the Curve - Audrey Kurth Cronin
Globalization and International Terrorism
VOLUME V: EUROPE IN THE INTERNATIONAL SYSTEM
Section 1: Making and Unmaking the European Order
Reflections on the Remaking of Europe - Alan Sharp
1815, 1919, 1945, post-1989
The Tragedy of Central Europe - Milan Kundera
Was there a European Order in the Twentieth Century? - Georges-Henri Soutou
From the Concert of Europe to the End of the Cold War
Section 2: Security Dilemmas after the Cold War
Averting Anarchy in the New Europe - Jack L. Snyder
NATO after the Cold War, 1991-1995 - Kori Schake
Institutional Competition and the Collapse of the French Alternative
The American Dimension - Valur Ingimundarson
Section 3: From Community to Union - Britain, Germany and the Reinforcement of US Hegemony in Europe in the 1990s
Negotiating the Single European Act - Andrew Moravcsik
National Interests and Conventional Statecraft in the European Community
State Interests and Institutional Rule Trajectories - Joseph M. Grieco
A NeoRealist Interpretation of the Maastricht Treaty and European Economic and Monetary Union
Europe after the Cold War - William Wallace
Interstate Order or Post-Sovereign Regional System?
Section 4: European Identity
National Identity and the Idea of European Unity - Anthony D. Smith
A European Identity. To the Historical Limits of a Concept - Bo Strath
Normative Power Europe - Ian Manners
a Contradiction in Terms?
Europe's Postmodern Identity - Peter van Ham
A Critical Appraisal
To Euro or Not to Euro? - Thomas Risse, Daniela Engelmann-Martin, Hans-Joachim Knopf and Klaus Roscher
The EMU and Identity Politics in the European Union
The Euro and European Identity - Matthias Kaelberer
Symbols, power and the politics of European Monetary Union
Section 5: European futures
Why Expand? - Helene Sjursen
The Question of Legitimacy and Justification in the EU's Enlargement Policy
Renationalizing or Regrouping? - Christopher Hill
EU Foreign Policy since 11 September 2001
Constructing the Common Foreign and Security Policy - Ben Tonra
The Utility of a Cognitive Approach
Why Europe Needs a Constitution - J rgen Habermas
VOLUME VI: WHATEVER HAPPENED TO THE PACIFIC CENTURY?
Section 1: Rivalry and Stability
Ripe for Rivalry - Aaron Friedberg
Prospects for Peace in a Multipolar Asia
The Geography of the Peace - Robert S. Ross
East Asia in the Twenty-First Century
Set for Stability? Prospects for Conflict and Cooperation in East Asia - Thomas Berger
Whatever Happened to the Pacific Century? - Rosemary Foot and Andrew Walter
Models, Markets and Power - Michael Mastanduno
Political Economy and the Asia-Pacific, 1989-1999
The Crisis of Postwar East Asian Capitalism - Barry K. Gills
American Power, Democracy and the Vicissitudes of Globalization
Section 2: Regionalization
Why is there no NATO in Asia? - Christopher Hemmer and Peter Katzenstein
Collective Identity, Regionalism and the Origins of Multilateralism
Between Balance of Power and Community - G John Ikenberry and Jitsuo Tsuchiyama
the Future of Multilateral Security Co-operation in the Asia-Pacific
Japan and Asia-Pacific Security - Peter Katzenstein and Nobuo Okawara
Regionalization, Entrenched Bilateralism and Incipient Multilateralism
Security Architecture in Asia - Barry Buzan
the Interplay of Regional and Global Levels
Section 3: Architects of War and Peace
Hegemony, Not Anarchy - Peter Van Ness
Why China and Japan are Not Balancing US Unipolar Power
China, the US-Japan Alliance and the Security Dilemma in East Asia - Thomas J. Christensen
Hegemon on the Offensive - Yong Deng
Chinese perspectives on US Global Strategy
Is China a Status Quo Power? - Alastair Ian Johnston
Getting Asia Wrong - David C. Kang
The Need for New Analytic Frameworks
Will Asia's Past be its Future? - Amitav Acharya
VOLUME VII: THE RISE AND FALL OF THE THIRD WORLD
Section 1: From Empire to Independence
Imperial Theory and the Question of Imperialism after Empire - Ronald Robinson
The Imperialism of Decolonization - W. M. Roger Louis and Ronald Robinson
Imperial History and Post-Colonial Theory - Dane Kennedy
Diplomacy and Decolonization - John Darwin
Section 2: Dependency or Development?
From Social Darwinism to Current Theories of Modernization - Ali A. Mazrui
A Tradition of Analysis
The Underdevelopment Of Development Literature - Tony Smith
The Case of Dependency Theory
Requiem or New Agenda for Third World Studies? - Tony Smith
Section 3: The Third World
Third World States - Werner Levi
Objects of Colonialism or Neglect?
Why "Third World"? - Leslie Wolf-Philips
Origins, Definition, USAGE
Section 4: The Third World and International Relations
Transforming International Regimes - Stephen D. Krasner
What the Third World Wants and Why
The Third World in the System of States - Mohammed Ayoob
Acute Schizophrenia or Growing Pains
Why Europe Matters, Why the Third World Doesn't - Steven van Evera
American Grand Strategy after the Cold War
Why the Third World Still Matters - Steven R. David
Section 5: After the Third World?
The End of the "Third World"? - Mark T. Berger
Where is the Third World Now? - Caroline Thomas
The global politics of development: towards a new research agenda - Anthony Payne
What was the Third World? - B. R. Tomlinson
VOLUME VIII: BEYOND THE 20th CENTURY
Section 1: Pasts
Clausewitz Rules, OK? - Colin Gray
The Future is the Past - with GPS
9/11 and the past and future of American foreign policy - Melvyn P. Leffler
Blasts from the past: proliferation lessons from the 1960s - Francis J. Gavin
Section 2: Futures
Dare not to Know - Ken Booth
International Relations Theory versus the Future
Remembering the Future - Utopia, Empire, and Harmony in 21st Century International Theory - William A. Callahan
Does Cosmopolitan Thinking Have a Future? - Derek Heater
Section 3: Primacy
American Primacy in Perspective - Stephen G. Brooks and William C. Wohlforth
The Soft Underbelly of American Primacy - Richard K. Betts
Tactical Advantages of Terror
Limits of American Power - Joseph S. Nye, Jr.
The first failed Empire of the 21st Century - Michael Mann
Section 4: West
Beyond the West - Michael Cox
Terrors in Transatlantia
The Rise of Europe, America's Changing Internationalism, and the End of US Primacy - Charles A. Kupchan
Section 5: Governance
A More Perfect Union? - Michael W. Doyle
The Liberal Peace and the Challenge of Globalization
Governance in a Partially Globalized World - Robert O. Keohane
Will the Nation-State Survive Globalisation? - Martin Wolf
Why a World State is Inevitable - Alexander Wendt
Section 6: Threats
Market Civilization and its Clash with Terror - Michael Mousseau
Proliferation Rings - Chaim Braun and Christopher F. Chyba
New Challenges to the Nuclear Nonproliferation Regime