Conference Diplomacy and International Order: From the Congress of Vienna to the G7
Editat de Sebastian Schindler, Christopher Daase, Wolfgang Seibelen Limba Engleză Hardback – 26 sep 2024
and International Relations is unique in the contemporary literature on
international institutions. While there have been attempts in both disciplines
to engage with the other and to integrate their respective insights, a direct,
focused exchange on core issues of international institutional development has
rarely taken place.
The volume takes this lacuna as a starting point. The structure of the
volume is strictly symmetrical. In each of the four main sections, one
historian and one IR scholar elaborate their views on one of four main aspects
of conference diplomacy: inclusion/exclusion, effectiveness, legitimacy, and
international order. This approach allows the authors to tackle the more general role of
institutions in international order in a long-term historical perspective. The
diagnosed crisis of contemporary, liberal order appears in a different light
when viewed before the background of continuity and change in the past 200
years. This book has the potential to become essential reading for scholars
and practitioners alike.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9783031623790
ISBN-10: 3031623797
Pagini: 296
Ilustrații: Approx. 295 p.
Dimensiuni: 148 x 210 mm
Ediția:2024
Editura: Springer Nature Switzerland
Colecția Palgrave Macmillan
Locul publicării:Cham, Switzerland
ISBN-10: 3031623797
Pagini: 296
Ilustrații: Approx. 295 p.
Dimensiuni: 148 x 210 mm
Ediția:2024
Editura: Springer Nature Switzerland
Colecția Palgrave Macmillan
Locul publicării:Cham, Switzerland
Cuprins
.- PART 1: INTRODUCTION.
.- Chapter 1: Conference Diplomacy and International Order.
.- PART 2: INCLUSION.
.-Chapter 2: Who is In and Who is Out? Inclusion and Exclusion in European Conference Diplomacy 1815–2015.
.-Chapter 3: Governing the World: Great Powers and the Dilemmas of Inclusion and Exclusion—1815, 1919, 1945, and Today.
.- PART 3: EFFECTIVENESS.
.- Chapter 4: The Effectiveness of Conference Diplomacy.
.- Chapter 5: The Effectiveness—and Limitations—of the Concert System.
.- PART 4: LEGITIMACY.
.- Chapter 6: The Legitimacy of Conference Diplomacy: A Historian’s View.
.- Chapter 7: Oligarchy and Legitimacy in World Politics: Conference Diplomacy 1815–2015.
.- PART 5: INTERNATIONAL ORDER.
.- Chapter 8: The Problem of International Order at the Versailles Conference and After.
.- Chapter 9: The Dynamics of International Order.
.- PART 6: CONCLUSION.
.-Chapter 10: Conference Diplomacy and the Future of International Order.
Notă biografică
Sebastian Schindler is Assistant Professor of Political Science at LMU Munich
Christopher Daase is Professor of International Organizations at Goethe-University Frankfurt.
Wolfgang Seibel is Emeritus Professor of Political and Administrative Science University of Konstanz.
Christopher Daase is Professor of International Organizations at Goethe-University Frankfurt.
Wolfgang Seibel is Emeritus Professor of Political and Administrative Science University of Konstanz.
Textul de pe ultima copertă
This volume’s focus on establishing a direct exchange between History
and International Relations is unique in the contemporary literature on
international institutions. While there have been attempts in both disciplines
to engage with the other and to integrate their respective insights, a direct,
focused exchange on core issues of international institutional development has
rarely taken place.
The volume takes this lacuna as a starting point. The structure of the
volume is strictly symmetrical. In each of the four main sections, one
historian and one IR scholar elaborate their views on one of four main aspects
of conference diplomacy: inclusion/exclusion, effectiveness, legitimacy, and
international order. This approach allows the authors to tackle the more general role of
institutions in international order in a long-term historical perspective. The
diagnosed crisis of contemporary, liberal order appears in a different light
when viewed before the background of continuity and change in the past 200
years. This book has the potential to become essential reading for scholars
and practitioners alike.
Sebastian Schindler is Assistant Professor of Political Science at LMU Munich
Christopher Daase is Professor of International Organizations at Goethe-University Frankfurt.
Wolfgang Seibel is Emeritus Professor of Political and Administrative Science University of Konstanz.
and International Relations is unique in the contemporary literature on
international institutions. While there have been attempts in both disciplines
to engage with the other and to integrate their respective insights, a direct,
focused exchange on core issues of international institutional development has
rarely taken place.
The volume takes this lacuna as a starting point. The structure of the
volume is strictly symmetrical. In each of the four main sections, one
historian and one IR scholar elaborate their views on one of four main aspects
of conference diplomacy: inclusion/exclusion, effectiveness, legitimacy, and
international order. This approach allows the authors to tackle the more general role of
institutions in international order in a long-term historical perspective. The
diagnosed crisis of contemporary, liberal order appears in a different light
when viewed before the background of continuity and change in the past 200
years. This book has the potential to become essential reading for scholars
and practitioners alike.
Sebastian Schindler is Assistant Professor of Political Science at LMU Munich
Christopher Daase is Professor of International Organizations at Goethe-University Frankfurt.
Wolfgang Seibel is Emeritus Professor of Political and Administrative Science University of Konstanz.
Caracteristici
Discusses the main aspects of conference diplomacy: inclusion, effectiveness, legitimacy, and international order Brings together historians and IR scholars to discuss international institutional development Facilitates a direct exchange between history and international relations, bringing historians into the conversation