ABSTRACT

This book provides an introduction to positivist-pluralist theories of international relations (IR) which emerged during the early-and mid-1950s along with Marxist political economic and non-Marxist economic theories of IR.

Positivist and Political-Economic Theories of International Relations is an in-depth critical study of texts and literature which highlight IR’s methodological pluralism even after it gained maturity. It examines how pluralist political status quo and radical economic criticism coexist in discrete areas of the discipline. Insights are provided into key positivist liberal-pluralist theories, namely decision-making approaches, and theories of integration, regionalism, interdependence, and regime. It discusses the four political economic and critical theories of Marxism, dependency, world systems, and international political economy.

The book, as an advanced supplementary reader, will be of great interest to researchers and students of international relations, history, law, and the multidisciplinary social scientific field of political economy.

part I|152 pages

Positivist Liberal-Pluralist Theories

chapter 1|18 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|28 pages

Decision-Making Theory

From Snyder to Allison and Beyond

chapter 3|38 pages

Integration Theory

The Four Schools and Beyond

chapter 4|22 pages

Theories of Regionalism

Early, Old and New

chapter 5|21 pages

Theories of Interdependence

chapter 6|23 pages

Regime Theory

part II|112 pages

Political-Economic and Radical Theories

chapter 8|24 pages

Dependency Theory

chapter 9|30 pages

World-Systems Theory

chapter 10|32 pages

International Political Economy