ABSTRACT

A new and illuminating critical examination of international relations in Europe.

This new volume presents all of the state of the art thinking, focusing particularly on international relations theory and theoretical debates in Western and Central European countries.

The contributors seek to strengthen knowledge about different ways of cultivating the discipline; to intensify pan-European communication concerning IR theory; to contribute to improving the quality of theorizing; and finally to consider future directions for the discipline in Europe. The main issues addressed include: the historical development of the discipline; factors driving IR theorizing; the institutional and cultural context of theorizing; 'homegrown' theory-building vs. theory import; patterns of traditional and new discourse; and the diversity of disciplinary traditions.

part |180 pages

Part I Countries and regions

chapter |25 pages

2 Italy

chapter |28 pages

3 Germany

Early school days

chapter |25 pages

4 Spain

chapter |24 pages

5 The Nordic countries

chapter |25 pages

7 The Czech Republic

part |73 pages

Part II Cross-cutting perspectives

chapter |26 pages

8 Blank, blind or blinded?

Cultural investigations in International Relations

chapter |28 pages

9 Approaches to IR

The relationship between Anglo-Saxon historiography and crosscommunity comparison

chapter |17 pages

Epilogue