Ordering the International: History, Change and Transformation (World of Whose Making?)

Ordering the International: History, Change and Transformation (World of Whose Making?)

by N/A

Synopsis

Ordering the International is a new textbook which teaches the core themes of International Studies in an innovative way. It asks: * Can we analyse international order as a whole, and if so, how? * How can we best understand and explain the processes of international interaction and the kinds of order and disorder with which they are associated? * Is the contemporary international system changing and, if so, by whose agency? Ideal for students in International Studies, the book analyses the historical origins, evolution and transformation of three sectors of the modern international system: the political, the socio-cultural, and the economic-technological. Drawing on a combination of approaches and debates, it concludes by discussing theories of international order and contending claims about its transformation. Ordering the International will provide you with the knowledge and skills to understand, and participate in, key debates about the world in which we live.

$3.28

Save:$24.59 (88%)

Quantity

3 in stock

More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 656
Publisher: Pluto Press
Published: 20 May 2004

ISBN 10: 0745321372
ISBN 13: 9780745321370

Author Bio
Dr William Brown is Lecturer in Government and Politics at The Open University. He is author of The European Union and Africa: the restructuring of north-south relations (I.B. Tauris, 2001). Dr Simon Bromley is Senior Lecturer in International Political Economy in the Faculty of Social Sciences at The Open University. He is the author of American Hegemony and World Oil (Polity Press, 1990) and Rethinking Middle East Politics (Polity Press, 1993). He has recently contributed to and edited Governing the European Union (Sage, 2001). Dr Suma Athreye has a degree in Science and Technology Policy Studies from the Science Policy Research Unit (SPRU) in 1996. She was a Research Fellow, Centre for Business Research at the University of Cambridge and taught at the Manchester School of Management at UMIST. Her main research interests lie in the areas of Economics of Technological Change, Industrial Development, and Economic Geography.