ABSTRACT

The field of international relations is often stagnated in realism and liberalism. Groundbreaking and guaranteed to stir debate, this work will move the field of international relations beyond its current, and often inadequate, assumptions. The contributors describe how states, ideologies, and other areas of analysis evolve, conquer others, or disappear entirely. Change and the fluid nature of history--though so clearly a part of historical reality--are not so deeply embedded in other paradigms as they are in the variation and selection model of evolutionary international relations. Some contributors lay out the various controversies inherent to the new theory, while others apply the paradigm to specific problems in IR theory. Regardless of the approach, the presentation of this entirely new perspective and method succeeds in forming a new paradigm of international relations. Contributors include: William R. Thompson, George Modelski, Vincent S. E. Falger, David P. Rapkin, Jennifer Sterling-Folker, Hendrik Spruyt, Stewart Patrick, Paul Hensel, Karen Rasler, Craig N. Murphy, Jeffrey A. Hart, Sangbae and Brian Pollins.

part I|46 pages

Central Paradigmatic Questions About Interpretation

chapter 1|14 pages

Evolutionary World Politics

Problems of Scope and Method

chapter 2|22 pages

Evolutionary World Politics Enriched

The Biological Foundations of International Relations

part II|114 pages

Bridges to Other Perspectives

chapter 5|23 pages

Diversity or Uniformity in the Modem World?

Answers from Evolutionary Theory, Learning, and Social Adaptation

chapter 6|42 pages

The Evolution of International Norms

Choice, Learning, Power, and Identity

part III|86 pages

Applications to Conflict and Cooperation

part IV|77 pages

Applications to the International Political Economy

chapter 11|30 pages

Technological Capacity as Fitness

An Evolutionary Model of Change in the International Political Economy

chapter 12|23 pages

Continuity versus Evolutionary Shift

Global Financial Expansion and the State