👨‍💼 CUSTOMER CARE NO +918468865271

⭐ TOP RATED SELLER ON AMAZON, FLIPKART, EBAY & WALMART

🏆 TRUSTED FOR 10+ YEARS

  • From India to the World — Discover Our Global Stores

🚚 Extra 10% + Free Shipping? Yes, Please!

Shop above ₹5000 and save 10% instantly—on us!

THANKYOU10

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

Sale price Rs.2,440.00 Regular price Rs.3,050.00
Tax included


Genuine Products Guarantee

We guarantee 100% genuine products, and if proven otherwise, we will compensate you with 10 times the product's cost.

Delivery and Shipping

Products are generally ready for dispatch within 1 day and typically reach you in 3 to 5 days.

Get 100% refund on non-delivery or defects

On Prepaid Orders

Author: Guilhot, Nicolas

Brand: Columbia University Press

Binding: paperback

Number Of Pages: 299

Release Date: 05-01-2011

Details: The 1954 Conference on Theory, sponsored by the Rockefeller Foundation, featured a who's who of scholars and practitioners debating the foundations of international relations theory. Assembling his own team of experts, all of whom have struggled with this legacy, Nicolas Guilhot revisits a seminal event 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 prerational and existential dimension that could not be "solved" by scientific means. As a result, this nascent theory was more a rejection of behavioral social science than the birth of one of its specialized branches. The archived conversations reproduced here, along with unpublished papers by Hans Morgenthau, Reinhold Niebuhr, and Paul Nitze, speak to this defensive stance. International relations theory is critically linked to the context of postwar liberalism, and the contributors explore how these origins have played out in political thought and American foreign policy.

EAN: 9780231152679

Package Dimensions: 9.0 x 6.0 x 0.8 inches

Languages: English