Logo UAB
2020/2021

International Relations

Code: 101091 ECTS Credits: 12
Degree Type Year Semester
2500259 Political Science and Public Management OB 2 A
2503778 International Relations OB 1 A
The proposed teaching and assessment methodology that appear in the guide may be subject to changes as a result of the restrictions to face-to-face class attendance imposed by the health authorities.

Contact

Name:
Ferran Izquierdo Brichs
Email:
Ferran.Izquierdo@uab.cat

Use of Languages

Principal working language:
catalan (cat)
Some groups entirely in English:
No
Some groups entirely in Catalan:
Yes
Some groups entirely in Spanish:
Yes

Teachers

Laura Feliu Martínez
Carlos Martin Faus
Alessandro Demurtas
Pablo Aguiar Molina

Prerequisites

No academic prerequisites.

The student must have the habit of reading, watching, listening and consulting different general information media, and especially following news of an international political nature, as well as opinion articles on global political issues understood in their broadest sense.

Important: This subject is basic and it is recommended to have it approved to take the subject "Contemporary International System" (SIC).

It is recommended to have read at least the book: Lundestad, Geir. (Various editions) East, West, North, South: major developments in international politics since 1945, London, Sage Publications Ltd.

Objectives and Contextualisation

This subject has a basic formation character. This means that it serves as a foundation from which to build the Degree in International Relations, the International Relations itinerary of the Degree in Political Science and Public Management, and the postgraduate degrees of the Faculty of Political Science and Sociology.

The basic objectives of the course are: for students to know the fundamental concepts of the discipline; to acquire analytical skills applicable to international relations; to become familiar with the set of processes and references that have shaped contemporary international society on a global scale; and to be able to express and defend their points of view, both orally and in writing, on the most relevant international issues.

Competences

    Political Science and Public Management
  • Applying theoretical and analytical knowledge of International Relations to practical and professional cases, in particular to the areas of conflict and cooperation between actors.
  • Arguing from different theoretical perspectives.
  • Assessing specific distinctive aspects and conceptual and methodological instruments of the different tendencies and analytical approximations of International Relations.
  • Demonstrating good writing skills in different contexts.
  • Demonstrating they know theoretical tendencies and classical and recent analytical approximations of International Relations.
  • Designing data collection techniques, coordinating the information processing and meticulously applying hypothesis verification methods.
  • Distinguishing the discipline's main theories and different fields: conceptual developments, theoretical frameworks and theoretical approaches underlying the discipline's knowledge and different areas and sub-areas, as well as their value for the professional practice through concrete cases.
  • Identifying sources of data and conducting bibliographic and documentary searches.
  • Interpreting and applying English texts in an academic way.
  • Managing the available time in order to accomplish the established objectives and fulfil the intended task.
  • Producing and planning researches or analytical reports.
  • Realising effective oral presentations that are suited to the audience.
  • Synthesizing and critically analysing information.
  • Using the main information and documentation techniques (ICT) as an essential tool for the analysis.
  • Working autonomously.
  • Working in teams and networking, particularly in interdisciplinary conditions.
    International Relations
  • Analyse international society and its structure and understand its importance for real-life problems and professional practice.
  • Identify data sources and carry out rigorous bibliographical and documentary searches.
  • Identify the main theories of international relations and their different fields (international theory, conflicts and security, international politics, etc.) to apply them in professional practice.
  • Learn and analyse the impacts of the globalisation process on domestic political systems and on the behaviour of the political actors and the public.
  • Produce and prepare the presentation of intervention reports and/or proposals.
  • Students must be capable of applying their knowledge to their work or vocation in a professional way and they should have building arguments and problem resolution skills within their area of study.
  • Students must be capable of collecting and interpreting relevant data (usually within their area of study) in order to make statements that reflect social, scientific or ethical relevant issues.
  • Students must develop the necessary learning skills to undertake further training with a high degree of autonomy.
  • Students must have and understand knowledge of an area of study built on the basis of general secondary education, and while it relies on some advanced textbooks it also includes some aspects coming from the forefront of its field of study.

Learning Outcomes

  1. Apply theoretical and analytical knowledge of international relations in practical and professional case studies, in particular in the area of conflict and cooperation between actors.
  2. Applying theoretical and analytical knowledge of International Relations to practical and professional cases, in particular to the areas of conflict and cooperation between actors.
  3. Arguing from different theoretical perspectives.
  4. Assessing specific distinctive aspects and conceptual and methodological instruments of the different tendencies and analytical approximations of International Relations.
  5. Critically assessing the impacts of globalization in several areas: safety, environment, human rights, migrations and peace.
  6. Demonstrate knowledge of theoretical trends and classical and recent analytical approaches to international relations.
  7. Demonstrating good writing skills in different contexts.
  8. Demonstrating they know theoretical tendencies and classical and recent analytical approximations of International Relations.
  9. Describe the international order: anarchy versus order, national society and transnational society.
  10. Describe the main elements that characterise international global society (1945-2000).
  11. Describe the major approaches to international relations (realism, transnationalism, structuralism).
  12. Describing the international order: anarchy versus order, society of states and transnational society.
  13. Describing the main characteristic elements of the international society as a whole (1945-2000).
  14. Designing data collection techniques, coordinating the information processing and meticulously applying hypothesis verification methods.
  15. Evaluate the different aspects of the different trends and analytical approaches in international relations from a specific methodological and conceptual viewpoint.
  16. Explaining the major approximations to the international relations (realism, transnationalism and structuralism).
  17. Identify data sources and carry out rigorous bibliographical and documentary searches.
  18. Identifying sources of data and conducting bibliographic and documentary searches.
  19. Interpreting and applying English texts in an academic way.
  20. Make adequate use of the theory and concepts of international relations (Hobbesian, Grotian and Kantian thought).
  21. Managing the available time in order to accomplish the established objectives and fulfil the intended task.
  22. Produce and prepare the presentation of intervention reports and/or proposals.
  23. Producing and planning researches or analytical reports.
  24. Properly using the theory and concepts of international relations (traditions of Hobbesian, Grotian or Kantian thought).
  25. Realising effective oral presentations that are suited to the audience.
  26. Students must be capable of applying their knowledge to their work or vocation in a professional way and they should have building arguments and problem resolution skills within their area of study.
  27. Students must be capable of collecting and interpreting relevant data (usually within their area of study) in order to make statements that reflect social, scientific or ethical relevant issues.
  28. Students must develop the necessary learning skills to undertake further training with a high degree of autonomy.
  29. Students must have and understand knowledge of an area of study built on the basis of general secondary education, and while it relies on some advanced textbooks it also includes some aspects coming from the forefront of its field of study.
  30. Synthesizing and critically analysing information.
  31. Using the main information and documentation techniques (ICT) as an essential tool for the analysis.
  32. Working autonomously.
  33. Working in teams and networking, particularly in interdisciplinary conditions.

Content

PART I. THEORY AND CONCEPTS

1. International relations as an area of study

The International Problems: War and Peace

Origin of the discipline: the social and intellectual impact of World War I

Anglo-Saxon Origin of the Discipline: The Social Science Framework

Idealistic discipline substratum: institutionalization and collective security

2. International Theory: The Great Traditions of Thought

Hobbesian tradition: anarchy or state of nature

Grocian Tradition: Order or Society of States

Kantian tradition: emancipation or global community

3. Theoretical approaches to international relations

Paradigms, mind maps or images of the world

Cold War analysis and Realism

Transnationalism and global problems

Structuralism and underdevelopment

The theory of international relations in the post-Cold War period

Feminist theory of international relations

 

PART II. INTERNATIONAL SYSTEM

4. The international system: a tool for analysis

Definition and elements of the system (actors, structure, dynamics and operating rules)

Geographical scope: open or partial system versus closed or global system

Value system: homogeneous system versus heterogeneous system

Levels of analysis: geographical subsystems and functional subsystems

5. The actors of the international system

Definition of international actor

Classical typology (states, international organizations and transnational forces);

other typologies

6. The state: the system of states

Legal equality: sovereignty and territory

Inequality in the state system: capacity and international power

Tangible and intangible resources

Current state typologies (failed states, pre-modern - modern - post-modern, etc.)

7. The powers of the system

Hierarchy in the state system: the exercise of international power

Traditional diplomatic powers

The phenomenon of superpowers in the nuclear world

The concept of power today (soft power, structural power, legitimate power, etc.)

Diversification of the phenomenon: hegemonic power, great power, emerging powers, medium power and regional power.

8. International organizations

Definition of international (intergovernmental) organization

Origin and development of the phenomenon

Typologies: geographical scope, functional purpose

Decision-making structure and mechanisms

Regionalism and international organizations

9. Transnational forces

Definition and typology of non-governmental organizations (NGOs)

The main areas of NGO action: human rights, the environment, development and humanitarian aid.

Definition of transnational company

Impact of transnational corporations on international society

10. The structure of the international system

Polarity and distribution of power

Typology: unipolar, bipolar or multipolar system

Polycentrism versus polarity

Continuity and change in the system (the debate on the causes of the end of the Cold War)

11. The dynamics of the international system: conflict

The notion of conflict in Social Sciences

Typology of conflicts

Conflict prevention, management and resolution

Map of international conflict

12. Dynamics of the international system: cooperation

The notion of cooperation

Areas and forms of cooperation (formal versus informal, bilateral versus multilateral, public versus private)

Development cooperation: origins and typology

International architecture of development cooperation (OECD, UN, EU, etc.)

13. The dynamics of the international system: integration and regionalism

The notion of integration and regionalism

Types of integration: formal versus informal, negative versus positive

Stages of integration: economic integration, political integration

Integration as a security community

14. Today's international society

Object of study of international relations

Society of States and Transnational Society

Anarchy versus order

International mechanisms

Fragmentation versus Globalism

 

PART III. THE GLOBAL INTERNATIONAL SOCIETY (1945-91)

15. Presentation of the great dynamics of contemporary international society

The East-West Fracture

The Center-Peripheral Fracture

Economic interdependence

Global problems

Part III. 1. Building the International Cold War Society

16. United Nations

Organization Genesis: San Francisco

Principles and purposes: the Charter of the United Nations

Institutional structure and decision-making mechanisms

International peace and security (Chapters VI and VII of the Charter)

Economic and social progress, development

17. Diplomatic-military bipolarism

Origin, definition and periodization of the Cold War

Spheres of influence: the bipolar division of Europe and Asia (the Korean War)

Block policy: military alliances (NATO, SEATO, CENTO, OTV)

Beginning of the nuclear race: strategic changes

The Evolution of the First Cold War: From Crises to Peaceful Coexistence

18. Hegemony in the international economic system

The United States: the hegemonic power

Bretton Woods: the principles of the system

Financial institutions: World Bank and IMF

Trade institutions: GATT, WTO

19. Fragmentation of the system and emergence of a third block

Decolonization: effects on the system

The Afro-Asian Movement: Bandung's Statement or the Periphery's Response to Block Policy

The Non-Aligned Movement

The Group of 77 and the launch of the North-South dialogue (UNCTAD)

 

Part III. 2. Evolution and Change of International Society: from Cold War to Post-Cold War

20. The détente between the blocks (1962-1979)

Relaxation: definition, origins and areas (nuclear weapons, regional conflicts, etc.)

The détente triangle: USA-USSR-China

Nuclear arms control: NPT, SALT

The effects of distension within the blocks: polycentrism and pan-Europeanism (Ostpolitik and CSCE)

21. Economic crisis and multipolarism in the 1970s

The U.S. setback in the global economy: reviewing the principles of free trade

Japan and the European Community, trading powers

The crisis of the international monetary system

The impact of the oil shocks: the role of OPEC

The G-7: management of economic multipolarity

22. The political-economic organization of the periphery in the seventies

Global periphery policy: New International Economic Order (NOEI), New World Information and Communication Order (NWICO)

New issues on the international agenda and the influence of the periphery (development, human rights, common heritage of humanity, etc.).

Political evolution and structuring of the periphery (MNA, G28, etc.)

Evolution and decline of North-South dialogue

23. End of détente and the Second Cold War (1975-1985)

Cold War and Periphery: Proxy Conflicts (Vietnam, Afghanistan, Angola, Central America, etc.)

Changes in U.S. Foreign Policy: Interventionism

USSR Foreign Policy: Extending Influence

Reactivation of thearms race (Star Wars, Euromissile crisis)

24. Reorganization of the economic system in the 1980s

Tripolar economic world: US-Japan-EC

Asian tigers and their commercial weight

New issues on the international trade agenda (Uruguay Round)

Financial flows and debt of developed economies

25. The explosion of the periphery in the 1980s

Diversification in the periphery (NIES, least developed countries, oil exporters, etc.).

The problem of external debt

The Crisis of the Non-Aligned Movement

Periphery and cultural fracture (Islamism)

26. The End of the Bipolar System (1985-91)

The Gorbachev effect and changes in Soviet foreign policy

US-USSR dialogue: nuclear disarmament (INF, START)

Negotiations on regional conflicts (Cambodia, Angola, Namibia)

Decomposition process of the Eastern bloc: the fall of the Berlin Wall and decomposition of the USSR

Causes and explanations of the end of the Cold War

27. Introduction to the current contemporary international system

New power structure in the international system

The Evolution of the Center-Periphery Fracture

Economic interdependence and globalization

Global problems

Methodology

The student's dedication to this subject is divided into several types of activities, each with a specific weight of work hours. This variety of forms of work is materialized in differentiated methodologies.
This subject has 12 ECTS credits, that is, it implies a total dedication of 300 hours, distributed in:
- Directed activities are activities in the classroom, with the presence of the teacher and can consist of master classes (with the support of ICT and with the possibility of developing debates in large groups), in seminars for discussion of compulsory readings in smaller groups and in sessions more oriented towards practical issues, in which cases, problems and examples related to the course syllabus will be analyzed. For these sessions, there will be compulsory pre-readings announced by the teachers in advance. These activities represent approximately one third of the total work required.
- Supervised activities are activities carried out by the student outside the classroom in accordance with a work plan designed and subsequently tutored and evaluated by the teacher. The student must: read and prepare texts that will be subject to control and evaluation in seminar sessions; write two group papers, which will be subject to control and evaluation with seminars; gather documentation on a specific topic of international relations (from a guide prepared by the teachers), write a brief report and make a presentation in the classroom; Watch a film (from a relationship chosen by the teachers), analyze it, interpret its international context and present a written report. Also, during the course, the student should read short articles in relation to which he/she will have to comment on the text read and, in addition, actively participate in debates on the articles. Also included are tutorials and other similar course follow-up activities. These activities represent approximately 10% of the work required.
- Autonomous activities are all those activities that the student does on his own and according to the requirements of the subject to successfully pass the subject, can be basic and complementary readings, study of class notes or all those other activities that complement the training that is achieved in this course. These activities represent, approximately, half of the work time of the students.
The teaching methodology is adapted to this distribution of work and activities.

Activities

Title Hours ECTS Learning Outcomes
Type: Directed      
Debates on compulsory readings and supplementary articles 8 0.32 7, 25, 19, 32, 33, 31, 4
Evaluable seminars 89 3.56 3, 13, 12, 16, 25, 19, 24, 31, 4
ICT Master Classes and Group Discussion 4 0.16 16, 25, 30, 5
Type: Supervised      
Course start tutoring and commenting on exams and papers 8 0.32 21, 19, 30, 33, 31
Group work writing 3 0.12
Reading and preparation of the texts that will be subject respectively of a control in class. 3 0.12
Tutoring of the second semester start and commentary of exams and papers 16 0.64 21, 18, 19, 30, 32
Type: Autonomous      
Study of the syllabus of the subject and complementary readings 155 6.2 21, 32

Assessment

Evaluation

Partial controls: 50% of the grade

Each semester there will be five partial and liberating checks on the readings of the agenda. The checks and readings will be discussed later in class and used for teaching purposes. 50% of the grade of the semester will be the average of these controls. In order to pass the course, the average of these controls in each semester must be higher than 5.

Of the seminars of the subject, four can be evaluated (two in each term). Each of them is worth 12.5% of the final grade (50% overall). They are not recoverable.

The dates of the controls and seminars that can be evaluated with marks, and other activities, will be specified in the course programme (see Virtual Campus).

Those who have not passed the controls will have the opportunity to take part in the compensation activities (recoveries) on the day determined by the Faculty. The compensation activities will be carried out after each semester and after the second semester's academic period has ended.

Those who have passed the average of the controls for a semester may apply for the compensatory activity in order to raise the grade of one control for each corresponding semester (January, June and the two semesters in the final recovery) without the risk of lowering the grade.

Seminars that can be evaluated with a grade cannot be retaken.

In accordance with article 117.2 of the UAB Academic Regulations, the evaluation of those students who have been enroled before may consist of a single synthesis examination. The students who wish to be evaluated this way should contact the professor at the beginning of the semester.

Assessment Activities

Title Weighting Hours ECTS Learning Outcomes
Each semester there will be five partial and liberating controls of the readings of the program. The controls and readings will be discussed later in class and will be used for teaching. 50% In order to pass the semester it is necessary that the mean of these controls is higher than 5 6 0.24 3, 8, 6, 7, 13, 10, 12, 9, 16, 11, 21, 18, 19, 29, 28, 26, 30, 32, 33, 24, 20, 31, 4, 5
Four evaluable seminars (two in each quarter). Each of them is worth 12.5% of the final grade. 50% of the final grade. (Not recoverable) 8 0.32 2, 1, 3, 7, 13, 12, 14, 23, 22, 16, 25, 21, 17, 18, 19, 28, 26, 27, 30, 32, 33, 24, 31, 4, 5, 15

Bibliography

Compulsory readings

- Barbé, Esther, Relaciones Internacionales, Madrid, Tecnos, 2020 (4ª ed.).

- LUNDESTAD, Geir. (Various editions) East, West, North, South: mayor developments in international politics since 1945, London, Sage Publications Ltd.

-Other readings and a book in the second semester that the teachers consider appropriate for the follow-up of the subject and that we will discuss in class. These readings can be on paper (which can be purchased at the Reprographic Service of the Faculty) or "virtual" (hung in electronic format on the Virtual Campus). In this sense, students are informed that part of the readings to be made (either to follow up the theory or to carry out the seminars) will be in English.

Recommended bibliography (by blocks)

 Parts I i II del Temari: 

  • BULL, H., La sociedad anárquica. Un estudio sobre el orden en la política mundial, Madrid: Los Libros de la Catarata, 2005.
  • DEL ARENAL, C., Introducción a la relaciones internacionales, Madrid: Tecnos, 1990 (3ª edició)
  • GUILHAUDIS, J. F., Relations Internationales Contemporaines, Paris: Éditions du Juris- Classeur, 2002
  • MERLE, M., Sociología de las Relaciones Internacionales, Madrid: Alianza, 2000 [3ª edició]
  • TRUYOL I SERRA, A., La sociedad internacional, Madrid : Alianza, 1993 [2ª edició]
  • VIOTTI, P.R. i Kauupi, M.V., International Relations Theory. Realism, Pluralism, Globalism, and Beyond, Boston: Allynand Bacon, 1999 [3ª edició].
  • CARR, E.H., La crisis de los veinte años (1919-1939).Una introducción al estudio de las relaciones internacionales, Madrid: Los Librosde la Catarata, 2004.

 Part III del Temari: 

  • ATTINÀ, F., El Sistema político global: introducción a las relaciones internacionales, Barcelona:Paidós, 2001
  • GUILHAUDIS, J. F., Relations Internationales Contemporaines, Paris: Éditions du Juris- Classeur, 2002
  • HELD, D., La democracia y el orden global: del estado moderno al gobierno cosmopolita, Barcelona: Paidós, 1997.
  • JUDT, Tony, Sobre el olvidado siglo XX, Madrid:Taurus, 2008.

         KISSINGER, H., Diplomacia, Barcelona: Ediciones B, 1998.

  • LUNDESTAD, G., East, West, North, South. Major Developments in International Politics since 1945, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2014.
  • MCMAHON, Robert , La Guerra Fría. Una breve introducción, Madrid: Alianza, 2009
  • NASSAU, A Worlds apart: the north-south divide and the international system, London: Zed Books, 1993
  • NYE Jr., J. S., La paradoja del poder norteamericano, Madrid: Taurus, 2003.
  • PEARSON, F. i ROCHESTER, J. M., Relaciones Internacionales. Situación global en el siglo XXI, Bogotá: Mc Graw Hill, 2000.

. POWASKI, Ronald E., "La guerra fría. Estados Unidos y la Unión Soviética, 1917-1991", Barcelona: Ed. Crítica, 2000

  • ZORGBIBE, Ch., Historia de las Relaciones Internacionales (2 vols), Madrid: Alianza, 1997.

 

Bibliografia recomanada (texts fonamentals i obres de referència)

 ARACIL, R.; OLIVER, J.; SEGURA, A., El mundo actual: De la Segunda Guerra Mundial a nuestros días, Barcelona: Publicacions Universitat de Barcelona, 1995.

 ARON, R., Paz y Guerra entre las Naciones, Madrid: Alianza, 1985 (2 vols.)

 BAYLIS, J. I SMITH, S. (ed.), The Globalization of World Politics. An Introduction to InternationalRelations, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2014.

 BIMBI, L. (ed.), No en mi nombre: Guerra y Derecho, Madrid: Editorial Trotta, 2003.

 BOYD, A., An Atlas of World Affairs, Londres: Routledge, 1991 (9ª ed.)

 BRZEZINSKI, Z., El Gran Tablero Mundial, Barcelona: Paidós, 1998.

 BRZEZINSKI, Z., El dilema de EE.UU: ¿dominación global o liderazgo global?, Barcelona: Paidós, 2005

 CALVOCORESSI, P., HistoriaPolítica del mundo contemporáneo. De 1945 a nuestros días, Madrid: Akal, 1999 (Setena edició).

 CARLSNAES, W.; RISSE, T.; SIMMONS, B. A. (eds.), Handbook of International Relations, Londres: SAGE, 2002.

 CARRILLO SALCEDO, J.A. (comp.), Textos básicos de Naciones Unidas, Madrid: Tecnos, 1982.

 CASTELLS, M., La era de la Información. Economía, sociedad y cultura (3 vols.), Madrid: Alianza, 1997-98.

 CENTRO DE INVESTIGACIÓN PARA LA PAZ (CIP), Anuario del CIP. Conflictos y dilemas de la sociedad internacional, Madrid: CIP / Icaria.

 CHALIAND, G. i RAGEAU, J.P., Atlas stratégique et géopolitique, Brussel·les: Complexe, 1994

 CROCKATT, R., The Fifty Years War. The United States and the Soviet Union in world politics, 1941-1991, London: Routledge, 1995.

 DER DERIAN, J. (ed.), International Theory. Critical Investigations, London: MacMillan, 1995

 DONELLY, J., Realism and International Relations, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2000.

 DOUGHERTY, J.E. i PFALTZGRAFF JR., R. L., Contending Theories of International Relations: A Comprehensive Survey (4th edition), New York: Longman, 1997.

 DOYLE, M. W., Ways of War and Peace, New York / London: W.W. Norton & Company, 1997.

 DUFFIELD, M., Las nuevas guerras en el mundo global. La convergencia entre desarrollo y seguridad, Madrid: Los Librosde la Catarata, 2004.

 EVANS, G. i NEWNHAM, J., The Penguin Dictionary of International Relations, London: Penguin Books, 1998.

 GARCÍA DE CORTÁZAR, F. i LORENZO, J.M., Historia del mundo actual, 1945-1989, Madrid: Alianza, 1990.

 GRIFFITHS,M., Fifty KeyThinkers in International Relations, London: Routledge, 1999.

 GRIFFITHS, M. i O’CALLAGHAN, T., International Relations: The Key Concepts, London: Routledge,2002

 HALLIDAY, F., Las relaciones internacionales en un mundo en transformación, Madrid: Los Libros de la Catarata, 2002.

 IGNATIEFF, M., Los derechos humanos como política e idolatría, Barcelona: Paidós, 2003.

 IZQUIERDO, F. i ETHERINGTON, J., Poder Global. Una mirada desde la Sociología del Poder, Barcelona: Bellaterra, 2017.

 JACKSON, R. i SORENSEN, G., Introduction to International Relations: Theories and Approaches, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2003.

 JOUVÉ, E., RelationsInternationales, Paris: Presses Universitaires de France, 1992.

 KAGAN, R., Poder y debilidad. Estados Unidos y Europa en el nuevo orden mundial, Madrid: Taurus, 2003.

 KALDOR, M., Las nuevas guerras, Barcelona: Tusquets Editores, 2001.

 KEGLEY Jr., C. W i WITTKOPF, E.R., World Politics. Trend and Tranformation, (8th edition) Boston: Bedford / St. Martin’s, 2001.

 KEGLEY Jr., C. W i WITTKOPF, E.R. (eds.), Global Agenda: Issues and Perspectives, McGraw-Hill, 2001.

 LAWSON, S. (ed.), The New Agenda for International Relations: From Polarisation to Globalisation in World Politics?, Polity Press, 2001.

 LINKLATER, A. (ed.), International Relations. Critical Concepts in Political Science (5 vols.), London: Routledge, 2000.

 LITTLE, R. i SMITH, M. (ed.), Perspectives on World Politics, London: Routledge, 1991 (2nd edition)

 LUNDESTAD, G., East, West, North, South. Major Developments in International Politics since 1945, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2014.

 McCORMICK, T.J., America's Half-Century. United States Foreign Policy in the Cold War and After, Baltimore: The John Hopkins University Press, 1995.

 McMAHON, R.J., The Cold War: A Very Short Introduction, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2003.

 MESA,R., La nueva sociedad internacional, Centro de Estudios Constitucionales, Madrid, 1992.

 MESA,R. (comp.) La sociedad internacional contemporánea. Documentosbásicos (2 vols.), Madrid: Taurus, 1982.

 MORGENTHAU, H., Escritos sobre política internacional, Madrid: Tecnos, 1990.

 ORTEGA, A., Horizontes cercanos. Guía para un mundo en cambio, Madrid: Taurus, 2000.

 OSMANCZYK,E.J. (ed.) Encyclopedia of theUnited Nations and International Agreements, Londres: Taylors & Francis , 1990.

 PEÑAS, F.J., Hermanos y enemigos. Liberalismo y Relaciones Internacionales, Madrid: Los Libros de la Catarata, 2003.

 PEREIRA CASTAÑARES, J.C. i MARTÍNEZ-LILLO, P.A., Documentos básicos sobre Historia de las Relaciones Internacionales 1815-1991, Madrid: Editorial Complutense, 1995.

 PLANO, J. / OLTON, R., The International Relations Dictionary, Santa Barbara: ABC-CLIO, 1988.

 ROSKIN, M. G. i BERRY, N.O., The New World Of International Relations, London: Prentice-Hall, 1999.

 SIPRI Yearbook on Armament and Disarmament, Oxford: Oxford University Press (anual).

 STEGER, M., Globalization: A Very Short Introduction, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2003.

 VIOTTI, P.R. i KAUPPI, M.V., International Relation and World Politics. Security, Economy, Identity, New Jersey: Prentice Hall, 1997

 VIOTTI, P.R. i KAUPPI, M.V., International Relations Theory. Realism, Pluralism, Globalism, and Beyond, Boston: Allyn and Bacon, 1999 [3ª edició]

 WALZER, M., Guerras justas e injustas. Unrazonamiento moral con ejemplos históricos, Barcelona: Paidós, 2001.

 WHITE, B., LITTLE, R. i SMITH, M. (eds.), Issues inWorld Politics, Palgrave Macmillan, 2001 (Second Edition - Revised, Expanded and Updated)

 ZALDÍVAR, C.A., Variaciones sobre un mundo encambio,Madrid: Alianza,1996.

 ZORGBIBE, Ch., Historia de las Relaciones Internacionales (2 vols), Madrid: Alianza, 1997.

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                              Women in IR

Dones a ladisciplina de RRII

 

Una bibliografia recopilada per:

Anjali K. Dayal

Assistant Professor

Fordham University

 

Madison V. Schramm

PhD Candidate

Georgetown University

 

Alexandra M. Stark

PhD Candidate

Georgetown University

 

 

IR Theory and Methods

Geddes, Barbara. "How the cases you choose affect the answers you get: Selection bias in comparative politics." Political Analysis 2.1 (1990): 131-150.

Gerring, John, and Rose McDermott. "An experimental template for case study research." American Journal of Political Science 51.3 (2007): 688-701.

Goddard,Stacie E., and Daniel H. Nexon. "The Dynamics of Global Power Politics: A Framework for Analysis." Journal of Global Security Studies 1.1 (2016): 4-18.

Goddard, Stacie E., and Daniel H. Nexon. "Paradigm lost? Reassessing theory of international politics." European Journal of International Relations 11.1 (2005): 9-61.

Kapiszewski, Diana, Lauren M. MacLean, and BenjaminL. Read. Field research in political science: practices and principles. Cambridge University Press, 2015.

Lawson, Stephanie. Theories of international relations: contending approaches to world politics, Cambridge, Polity, 2015.

Lawson, Stephanie. International Relations, Cambridge, Polity, 2017.

McDermott, Rose. "Experimental methodology in political science." Political Analysis 10.4 (2002): 325-342.

McDermott, Rose. "New directions for experimental work in international relations." International Studies Quarterly 55.2 (2011): 503-520.

Pharr, Susan J., and Robert D. Putnam. Disaffected democracies: what's troubling the trilateral countries?. Princeton University Press, 2000

Sartori, Anne E. Deterrence by diplomacy. Princeton University Press, 2013

 

Realism

“Realism.”  Jennifer Sterling-Folker and Jason Charrette. (2013) International Organization and Global Governance, Thomas G. Weiss and Rorden Wilkinson, eds.  London:  Routledge.

Sterling-Folker, Jennifer, and Rosemary E. Shinko. "Discourses of power: traversing the realist-postmodern divide." Millennium-Journal of International Studies 33.3 (2005): 637-664.

Strange, Susan. "Cave! hic dragones: a critique of regime analysis.” International Organization 36.02 (1982): 479-496.

Tickner, J. Ann. "Hans Morgenthau's principles of political realism: A feminist reformulation." Millennium 17.3 (1988): 429-440.

 

Neorealism

Milner, Helen. "The assumption of anarchy ininternational relations theory: a critique." Review of International Studies 17.01 (1991): 67-85.

Elman, Colin, Miriam Fendius Elman, and Paul W. Schroeder. "Historyvs. Neo-realism: A Second Look." International Security 20.1 (1995):182-195.

 

Liberalism

Avant, Deborah D., Martha Finnemore, and Susan K. Sell, eds. Who Governs the Globe?.Vol. 114. Cambridge University Press, 2010. 

Milner, Helen V., and Andrew Moravcsik, eds. Power, interdependence, and nonstate actorsin world politics. Princeton University Press, 2009.

Morefield, Jeanne. Covenants without swords: idealist liberalism and the spirit of empire. Princeton University Press, 2009.

Slaughter, Anne-Marie. A New World Order. Princeton University Press, 2009.

Sterling-Folker, Jennifer. "Competing Paradigms or Birds of a Feather? Constructivism and neoliberal institutionalism compared." International Studies Quarterly 44.1 (2000): 97-119.

Woods, Ngaire, and Leonardo Martinez-Diaz, eds. Networks of influence?: Developing countries in a networked global order. OUP Oxford, 2009.

 

Liberalism and the Democratic Peace

Gowa, Joanne. Ballots and Bullets: The elusive democratic peace. Princeton University Press, 2000.

Rasler, Karen, and William Thompson. Puzzles of the Democratic Peace: theory, geopolitics and the transformation of world politics. Springer, 2016.

Farnham, Barbara. "The Theory of Democratic Peace and Threat Perception." International Studies Quarterly 47.3 (2003): 395-415.

Slantchev, Branislav L., Anna Alexandrova, and Erik Gartzke. "Probabilistic Causality, Selection Bias, and the Logic of the Democratic Peace." American Political Science Review 99.03 (2005): 459-462.

Tomz, Michaeland Jessica Weeks,"Public Opinion and the Democratic Peace," American Political Science Review, Vol. 107, No. 3 (2013), pp. 849-865.

Zinnes, Dina A. "Constructing Political Logic: The democratic peace puzzle." Journal of Conflict Resolution 48.3 (2004): 430-454.

 

Constructivism

Bukovansky, Mlada. "American identity and neutral rights from independence to the War of 1812." International Organization 51.02 (1997): 209-243.

“Constructivism.”  Jennifer Sterling-Folker and Dina Badie.  (2011).  In The Routledge Handbook of American Foreign Policy.  Steven Hook and Christopher Jones, eds.  London: Routledge.

Dixon, Jennifer M. "Rhetorical adaptation and resistance to international norms." Perspectives on Politics 15.1 (2017): 83-99.

Fierke, Karin M. "Multiple Identities, Interfacing Games: The social construction of Western action in Bosnia." European Journal of International Relations 2.4 (1996): 467-497.

Finnemore, Martha and Kathryn Sikkink, “International Norms and Political Change.” International Organization, Vol. 52, No. 4 (1998): 887-917.

Finnemore, Martha and Kathryn Sikkink. "Taking stock: the constructivist research program in international relations and comparative politics." Annual Review of Political Science 4.1 (2001)

Goddard, Stacie E. "When Right Makes Might: how Prussia overturned the European balance of power." International Security 33.3 (2009): 110-142.

Hansen, Lene. "The Little Mermaid's Silent Security Dilemma and the Absence of Gender in the Copenhagen School." Millennium-Journal of International Studies 29(2000): 285-306.

Keck, Margaret E., and Kathryn Sikkink. Activists beyond borders: Advocacy networks in international politics. Cornell University Press, 2014.

Klotz, Audie. "Norms reconstituting interests: global racial equality and US sanctions against South Africa." International Organization 49.03 (1995): 451-478.

Klotz, Audie, and Cecelia Lynch. Strategies for research in constructivist international relations. ME Sharpe, 2007.

Mitzen, Jennifer. "Ontological security in world politics: State identity and the security dilemma." European Journal of international relations 12.3 (2006): 341-370.

Smith, Jackie, Charles Chatfield, and Ron Pagnucco. Transnational social movements and global politics: Solidarity beyond the state. Syracuse University Press, 1997.

Stroup, Sarah S. Borders among Activists: International NGOs in the United States, Britain, and France. Cornell University Press, 2012.

 

The Bargaining Model & GT

Chiba, Daina, Jesse C. Johnson, and Brett Ashley Leeds. 2015. Careful Commitments: Democratic States and Alliance Design. Journal of Politics 77 (4): 968-982.

Fang, Songying , Jesse Johnson and Ashley Leeds To Concede or To Resist: The Restraining Effect of Military Alliance. International Organization 68 (4):775-809.          

Kadera, Kelly M. The Power-Conflict Story: A dynamic model of interstate rivalry. University of Michigan Press,2001.

Walter, Barbara. “The Critical Barrier to Civil War Settlement.” International Organization, Vol. 51, No. 3, 1997, pp. 335-364.

Weisiger, Alex, and Keren Yarhi-Milo. "Revisiting reputation: How past actions matter in international politics." International Organization 69.02 (2015): 473-495.

 

Domestic Politics of Foreign Policy

Hermann, Margaret G., and Charles F. Hermann. "Who makes foreign policy decisions and how: An empirical inquiry." International Studies Quarterly 33.4 (1989): 361-387.

Milner, Helen V. Interests, institutions, and information: Domestic politics and international relations. Princeton University Press, 1997.

Weeks, Jessica L. "Autocratic audience costs: Regime type and signaling resolve." International Organization 62.01 (2008): 35-64.

Weeks, Jessica L. "Strongmen and straw men: Authoritarian regimes and the initiation of international conflict." American Political Science Review 106.02 (2012): 326-347.

Wohlstetter, Roberta. Pearl Harbor: warning and decision. Stanford University Press, 1962.

 

World War I

MacMillan, Margaret. The War that Ended Peace: The road to 1914. Penguin Canada, 2013.

Barbara Tuchman, 1962. The Guns of August, Chapters 1-9, pp. 1- 146.

 

World War II

Hamann, Brigitte. Hitler's Vienna: a dictator's apprenticeship. Oxford University Press, USA, 2000.

Steiner, Zara.The Triumph of the Dark: European international history 1933-1939. Oxford University Press, 2011.

 

The Cold War

Harrison, Hope. "DrivingtheSovietsup the Wall: A Super-Ally, a Superpower, and the Building of the Berlin Wall, 1958-61." Cold War History 1.1 (2000): 53-74.

Larson, Deborah Welch. "Trust and Missed Opportunities in International Relations." Political Psychology 18.3 (1997): 701-734.

Lebow, Richard Ned, and Janice Gross Stein. We All Lost the Cold War. Princeton University Press, 1995.

Savranskaya, Svetlana. Masterpieces of History: the peaceful end of the Cold War in Eastern Europe, 1989. Central European University Press, 2010.

Wohlstetter, Roberta. "Cuba and Pearl Harbor: Hindsight and Foresight." Foreign Affairs 43.4 (1965): 691-707.

 

Bureaucratic Politics

Hudson, Valerie M. "The History and Evolution of Foreign Policy Analysis." Foreign Policy: theories, actors, cases (2008): 11-29.

Hermann, Margaret G., and Charles F. Hermann. "Who Makes Foreign Policy Decisions and How: An empirical inquiry." International Studies Quarterly 33.4 (1989): 361-387.

 

Alliances

Leeds, Brett Ashley, and Michaela Mattes. "Alliance politics during the Cold War: aberration, new world order, or continuation of history?." Conflict Management and Peace Science 24.3 (2007): 183-199.

Leeds, Brett Ashley. "Do alliances deter aggression? The influence of military alliances on the initiation of militarized interstate disputes." American Journal of Political Science 47.3 (2003): 427-439.

Leeds, Brett Ashley, Andrew G. Long, and Sara McLaughlin Mitchell. "Reevaluatingalliance reliability: Specific threats, specific promises." Journal of Conflict Resolution 44.5 (2000): 686-699.

Leeds, Brett Ashley, and Burcu Savun. "Terminating alliances: Why do states abrogate agreements?." The Journal of Politics 69.4 (2007): 1118-1132.

Long, Andrew G., and Brett Ashley Leeds. "Trading for security: Military alliances and economic agreements." Journal of Peace Research 43.4 (2006): 433-451.

Weitsman, Patricia A. "Alliance Cohesion and Coalition Warfare: The Central Powers and Triple Entente." Security Studies 12.3 (2003): 79-113.

Weitsman, Patricia A. Dangerous alliances: proponents of peace, weapons of war. Stanford University Press, 2004.

Weitsman, Patricia A. "Intimate enemies: The politics of peacetime alliances." Security Studies 7.1 (1997): 156-193.

Weitsman, Patricia. Waging war: alliances, coalitions, and institutions of interstate violence. Stanford University Press, 2013.

 

Political Psychology

Abdelal, Rawi, Yoshiko M Herrera, Alastair Iain Johnston, Rose McDermott. "Identity as a Variable." Perspectives on politics (2006): 695-711.

Crenshaw, Martha. "The Psychology of Terrorism: An agenda for the 21st century." Political Psychology 21.2 (2000): 405-420.

Hermann, Margaret G., and Charles W. Kegley. "Rethinking democracy and international peace: Perspectives from political psychology." International Studies Quarterly 39.4 (1995): 511-533.

Jervis, R., Lebow, R. N., & Stein, J. G.(1989). Psychology and Deterrence. JHU Press.

Kaarbo, Juliet, and Margaret G. Hermann. "Leadership styles of prime ministers: How individual differences affect the foreign policymaking process." The Leadership Quarterly 9.3 (1998): 243-263.

McDermott, Rose. 2004. Political Psychology in International Relations. Ann Arbor, Mich.: University of Michigan Press.

Monroe, Kristen Renwick, James Hankin, and Renée Bukovchik Van Vechten. "The psychological foundations of identity politics." Annual Review of Political Science 3.1 (2000): 419-447.

Yarhi-Milo, Keren. "In the Eye of the Beholder: How Leaders and Intelligence Communities Assess the Intentions of Adversaries." International Security 38.1 (2013): 7-51.

 

Gender and International Relations (and other critical approaches)

Agathangelou, Anna M., and Lily HM Ling. Transforming World Politics: From empire to multiple worlds. Routledge, 2009.

Bush, Sarah Sunn. "International politics and the spread of quotas for women in legislatures." International Organization 65.01 (2011): 103-137.

Carpenter, Charli R. “‘Women, Children and Other Vulnerable Groups’: gender, strategicframes and the protection of civilians as a transnational issue." International Studies Quarterly 49.2 (2005)

Confortini, Catia Cecilia. Intelligent Compassion: Feminist critical methodology in the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom. Oxford University Press, 2012.

Enloe, Cynthia. Bananas, Beaches and Bases: Making feminist sense of international politics. Univ of California Press, 1989.

Hudson, ValerieM., et al. "The heart of the matter: The security of women and the security of states." International Security 33.3 (2009): 7-45

Hudson, Valerie,Bonnie Ballif-Spanvill, and Mary Capriolo. Sex and world peace. ColumbiaUniversity Press, 2012.

Sjoberg, Laura, and Caron E. Gentry. Mothers, Monsters, Whores: women's violence in global politics. Zed Books, 2007.

Sjoberg, Laura. Gendering Global Conflict: toward a feminist theory of war. Columbia University Press, 2013.

Stern, Maria and Marysia Zalewski. “Feminist Fatigue(s): reflections on feminism and familiar fables of militarization” The Review of International Studies, 35.3 (2009):611-630.

Swers, Michele. "Building a Reputation on National Security: The impact of stereotypes related to gender and military experience." Legislative Studies Quarterly 32.4 (2007): 559-595.

Tickner, J. Ann. "What is Your Research Program? Some feminist answers to international relations methodological questions." International Studies Quarterly 49.1 (2005): 1-21.

Towns, Ann E. Women and states: Norms and hierarchies in international society. Cambridge University Press, 2010.

Wibben, Annick TR. Feminist Security Studies: A narrative approach. Routledge, 2010.

Zalewski, Marysia. “The Women/'Women' Question In International Relations.” Millennium 23.3 (1994):407-423.

Zalewski, Marysia. “Where is Woman in International Relations?: 'To Return as a Woman and Be Heard.'’ Millennium 27.4 (1999):847-867

Zalewski, Marysia. “Do We Understand Each Other Yet? Troubling Feminist Encounters with(in) International Relations.”  The British Journal of Politics and InternationalRelations9.2(2007):302-312.

Zalewski, Marysia. “‘I don’t evenknow what gender is’: A discussion of the relationship between gender mainstreaming and feminist theory.” The Review of InternationalStudies 36.1 (2010):3-27.

Zalewski, Marysia. Feminist International Relations: Exquisite Corpse. Routledge, 2013.

Zalewski, Marysia and Anne S. Ryan. “Taking Feminist Violence Seriously in Feminist International Relations.” International Feminist Journal of Politics 15.3 (2013):293-313.

Zalewski, Marysia and Anne S. Ryan. “ “Unthinking” sexual violence in a neoliberal era of spectacular terror.” Critical Studies of Terrorism 8.3 (2015): 439-455.

 

International Political Economy

Ball, Nicole. Security and economy in the Third World. Princeton University Press, 2014.

Barton, John H., et al. The Evolution of the Trade Regime: Politics, Law, and Economics of the GATT and the WTO. Princeton University Press, 2008.

Bermeo, Sarah Blodgett, and David Leblang. "Migration and foreign aid." International Organization 69.03 (2015): 627-657.

Blanton, Shannon Lindsey, and Robert G. Blanton. "A sectoral analysis of human rights and FDI: Does industry type matter?." International Studies Quarterly 53.2 (2009): 469-493.

Brooks, Sarah M., Raphael Cunha, and Layna Mosley. "Categories, Creditworthiness, and Contagion: How Investors' Shortcuts Affect Sovereign Debt Markets." International Studies Quarterly 59.3 (2015): 587-601.

Bush, Sarah Sunn. 2015. The Taming of Democracy Assistance: Why Democracy Promotion Does Not Confront Dictators. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Büthe, Tim, and Helen V. Milner. "The politics of foreign direct investment into developing countries: increasing FDI through international trade agreements?." American Journal of Political Science 52.4 (2008): 741-762.

Davis, Christina L. "International institutions and issue linkage: Building support for agricultural trade liberalization." American Political Science Review 98.01 (2004): 153-169.

Davis, Christina L., and Sarah Blodgett Bermeo. "Who files? Developing countryparticipation in GATT/WTO adjudication." The Journal of Politics 71.3 (2009): 1033-1049.

Davis, Christina L. Why adjudicate?: enforcing trade rules in the WTO. Princeton University Press, 2012.

Epstein, Rachel A. Banking on Markets: The Transformation of Bank-State Ties in Europe and Beyond. Oxford University Press, 2017

Fritz, Barbara, and Laurissa Mühlich. "Varieties of regional monetary cooperation: a tool for reducing volatility in developing economies?." Contemporary Politics 21.2 (2015): 127-144.

Goldstein, Judith. "Ideas, institutions, and American trade policy." International Organization 42.01 (1988): 179-217.

Gowa, Joanne. Allies, adversaries, and international trade. Princeton University Press, 1995.

Gowa, Joanne, and Edward D. Mansfield. "Power politics and international trade." American Political Science Review 87.02 (1993): 408-420.

Gray, Julia. The company states keep: International economic organizations and investor perceptions. Cambridge University Press, 2013.

Grittersova, Jana. Borrowing Credibility: ForeignFinanciers and Monetary Regimes.University of Michigan Press, 2017.

Guisinger, Alexandra. "Determining trade policy: Do voters hold politicians accountable?." International Organization 63.03 (2009): 533-557.

Johnson, Juliet. Priests of Prosperity: How Central Bankers Transformed the Postcommunist World. Cornell University Press, 2016.

Lankina, Tomila, and Lullit Getachew. “Mission or Empire, Word or Sword? The Human Capital Legacy in Post-Colonial Democratic Development.” American Journal of Political Science 56.2 (2012):465-483.

Lankina, Tomila, and Lullit Getachew. “Competitive Religious Entrepreneurs: Christian Missionaries and Female Education in Colonial and Post-colonial India.”British Journal of Political Science 43.1 (2013):103-131.

Madeira, Mary Anne. "New trade, new politics: intra-industry trade and domestic political coalitions." Review of International Political Economy 23.4 (2016): 677-711.

Mansfield, Edward D., Helen V. Milner, and B. Peter Rosendorff. "Free to Trade: Democracies, autocracies, and international trade." American Political Science Review 94.02 (2000): 305-321.

Mansfield, Edward D., and Helen V. Milner. Votes, vetoes, and the political economy of international trade agreements. Princeton University Press, 2012.

Martin, Lisa L. Coercive cooperation: Explaining multilateral economic sanctions. Princeton University Press, 1993.

McNamara, Kathleen R. The Currency of Ideas: monetary politics in the European Union. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 1998.

McNamara, Kathleen R. "A Rivalry in the Making? The Euro and international monetary power." Review of International Political Economy 15.3 (2008): 439-459.

Meunier, Sophie. "What single voice? European institutions and EU–US trade negotiations." International organization 54.01 (2000): 103-135.

Milner, Helen V. Resisting protectionism: Global industries and the politics of international trade. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1988.

Mosley, Layna. "Room to move: International financial markets and national welfare states." International organization 54.04 (2000): 737-773.

Mosley, Layna. Labor rights and multinational production. Cambridge University Press, 2010.

Mosley, Layna, and Saika Uno. "Racing to the bottom or climbing to the top? Economic globalization and collective labor rights." Comparative Political Studies 40.8 (2007): 923-948.

Norrlof, Carla. America's global advantage: US hegemony and international cooperation. Cambridge University Press, 2010.

Pandya, Sonal S. "Democratization and foreign direct investment liberalization, 1970–2000." International Studies Quarterly 58.3 (2014): 475-488.

Peters, Margaret E. "Open trade, Closed Borders Immigration in the era of Globalization." World Politics 67.01 (2015): 114-154.

Peters, Margaret E. "Trade, Foreign Direct Investment, and Immigration Policy Making in the United States." International Organization 68.04 (2014): 811-844.

Peterson, V. Spike. A Critical Rewriting of Global Political Economy: Integrating reproductive, productive, and virtual economies. Psychology Press, 2003.

Simmons, Beth A. "Bargaining over BITs, arbitrating awards: The regime for protection and promotion of international investment." World Politics 66.01 (2014): 12-46.

Simmons, Beth A. "International law and state behavior: Commitment and compliance in international monetary affairs." American Political Science Review 94.04 (2000): 819-835.

Spar, Debora L., and David B. Yoffie. "A Race to the Bottom or Governance from the Top?." Coping with globalization (2000): 31-51.

Thrasher, Rachel Denae, and Kevin P. Gallagher. "21st Century TradeAgreements: Implications for Development Sovereignty." Denv. J. Int'l L. & Pol'y 38 (2009): 313.

Tobin, Jennifer L., and Susan Rose-Ackerman. "When BITs Have Some Bite: The political-economic environment for bilateral investment treaties." The Review of International Organizations 6.1 (2011): 1-32.

Walter, Stefanie, and Thomas D. Willett. "Delaying the inevitable: A political economy approach to currency defenses and depreciation." Review of International Political Economy 19.1 (2012): 114-139.

Wilf, Meredith. "credibility and Distributional effects of International Banking regulations: evidence from us Bank stock returns." International Organization 70.4 (2016): 763.

Woods, Ngaire. The Globalizers: the IMF, the World Bank, and their borrowers. Cornell University Press, 2006.

Woods, Ngaire, and Amrita Narlikar. "Governance and the Limits of Accountability: The WTO, the IMF, and the World Bank." International Social Science Journal 53.170 (2001): 569-583.

Yarbrough, Beth V., and Robert M. Yarbrough. Cooperation and governance in international trade: The strategic organizational approach. Princeton University Press, 2014.

 

Globalization and (Economic) Development

Adida, Claire L., and Desha M. Girod. "Do Migrants Improve their Hometowns? Remittances and access to public services in Mexico, 1995-2000." Comparative Political Studies 44.1 (2011): 3-27.

Ben-Artzi, Ruth. Regional Development Banks in Comparison: Banking Strategies versus Development Goals. New York: Cambridge UP, 2017. Print.

Girod, Desha M., and Jennifer L. Tobin. "Take the Money and Run: The determinants of compliance with aid agreements." International Organization 70.01(2016): 209-239.

Milner, HelenV. "Globalization, development, and international institutions: Normative and positive perspectives." Perspectives on Politics 3.04 (2005): 833-854.

Nooruddin, Irfan, and Nita Rudra. "Are developing countries really defying the embedded liberalism compact?." World Politics 66.04 (2014): 603-640.

Pandya, Sonal S. "Labor markets and the demand for foreign direct investment." International Organization 64.03 (2010): 389-409.

Rudra, Nita. "Globalization and the decline of the welfare state in less-developed countries." International Organization 56.02 (2002): 411-445.

Rudra, Nita. "Globalization and the Strengthening of Democracy in the Developing World." American Journal of Political Science 49.4 (2005): 704-730.

 

Military Institutions and Civil-MIl Relations

Avant, Deborah D. The market for force: The consequences of privatizing security. Cambridge University Press, 2005.

Brooks, Risa. "Abandoned at the palace: Why the Tunisian military defected from the Ben Ali regime in January 2011." Journal of Strategic Studies 36.2 (2013): 205-220.

Brooks, Risa. "An autocracyat war: Explaining Egypt's military effectiveness, 1967 and 1973." Security Studies 15.3 (2006): 396-430.

Brooks, Risa A. "Making Military Might: Why Do States Fail and Succeed?: A Review Essay." International Security 28.2 (2003): 149-191.

Brooks, Risa. Shaping strategy: the civil-military politics of strategic assessment. Princeton University Press, 2008.

Kier, Elizabeth. 1998. “Homosexuals in the U.S. Military: Open Integration and Combat Effectiveness.” International Security 23 (2): 5–39.

Rice, Condoleezza. The Soviet Union and the Czechoslovak Army, 1948-1983: Uncertain Allegiance. Princeton University Press, 2014.

Talmadge, Caitlin. The Dictator's Army: Battlefield Effectiveness in Authoritarian Regimes. Cornell University Press, 2015.

 

The Environment and International Public Goods

DeSombre, Elizabeth R. Domestic Sources of International Environmental Policy: Industry, environmentalists, and US power. Mit Press, 2000.

Green, Jessica F. Rethinking private authority: Agents and entrepreneurs in global environmental governance. Princeton University Press, 2013.

Hadden, Jennifer. Networks in Contention. Cambridge University Press, 2015.

O'neill, Kate. The environment and international relations. Cambridge University Press, 2016.

Ostrom, Elinor. Governing the Commons. Cambridge University Press, 1990.

Schreurs, Miranda A. Environmental Politics in Japan, Germany, and the United States. Cambridge University Press, 2003.

Schreurs, MirandaA. "From the bottom up local and subnational climate change politics." The Journal of Environment & Development 17.4 (2008): 343-355.

 

Peace and conflict

Boulding, Elise. Building a Global Civic Culture: Education for an interdependent world. Syracuse University Press, 1990.

Boulding, Elise. Cultures of Peace: The hidden side of history. Syracuse University Press, 2000.

Campbell, Susanna P.“Ethics of Research in Conflict Environments.” Journal of Global Security Studies 2.1 (2017):89-101.

Campbell, Susanna P. Global Governance and Local Peace: Accountability and Performance in International Peacebuilding. Cambridge University Press, 2018.

Campbell, Susanna P., Michael G. Findley, and Kyosuke Kikuta. “An Ontology of Peace: Landscapes of Conflict and Cooperation with Application to Colombia.” International Studies Review 19.1 (2011):92-113.

Gizelis, Theodora-Ismene. "Gender empowerment and United Nations peacebuilding." Journal of Peace Research 46.4 (2009): 505-523.

Snyder, Jack and Karen Ballentine. “Nationalism and the Marketplace of Ideas.” International Security, Vol. 21, No. 2 (Autumn, 1996): pp. 5-40.

Stephan, Maria J. and Erica Chenoweth. “Why civil resistance works: The strategic logic of nonviolent conflict.” International Security 33.1 (2008): 7-44.

 

Nuclear Weapons

Blight, James G., and Janet M. Lang. The Armageddon Letters: Kennedy, Khrushchev, Castro in the Cuban Missile Crisis. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, 2012.

Cohn, Carol. "Sex and death in the rational world of defense intellectuals." Signs: Journal of women in culture and society 12.4 (1987): 687-718.

Eden, Lynn. Whole World on Fire: Organizations, knowledge, and nuclear weapons devastation.Cornell University Press, 2004.

Solingen, Etel. Nuclear Logics: contrasting paths in East Asia and the Middle East. Princeton University Press, 2009.

Tannenwald, Nina. "The Nuclear Taboo: The United States and the normative basis of nuclear non-use." International Organization 53.03 (1999): 433-468

           

Terrorism

Crenshaw, Martha. "Explaining Suicide Terrorism: A review essay." Security Studies 16.1 (2007): 133-162.

Crenshaw, Martha, ed. Terrorism in context. Penn State Press, 2010.

Cronin, Audrey Kurth. How Terrorism ends: understanding the decline and demise of terrorist. Princeton University Press, 2009. 

Dugan, Laura, and Erica Chenoweth. "Moving beyond deterrence: The effectiveness of raising the expected utility of abstaining from terrorism in Israel." American Sociological Review 77.4 (2012): 597-624.

Kydd, Andrew, and Barbara F. Walter. "Sabotaging the Peace: The politics of extremist violence." International Organization 56.02 (2002): 263-296.

Kydd, Andrew H., and Barbara F. Walter. "The Strategies of Terrorism." International Security 31.1 (2006): 49-80.

LaFree, Gary, Min Xie, and Aila M. Matanock. 2017. “Contagious Diffusion of World-Wide Terrorism: It Is Less Common than We Might Think.” Studies in Conflict and Terrorism 41(5) (Print version in 2018).

Miller, Erin. "Patterns of onset and decline among terrorist organizations." Journal of Quantitative Criminology 28, no. 1 (2012): 77-101.

Stanton, Jessica A. "Terrorism in the context of civil war."TheJournal of Politics 75.4 (2013): 1009-1022.

 

Civil War and Intervention

Balcells, Laia. Rivalry and Revenge:The Politics of Violence during Civil War. Cambridge University Press, 2017.

Brancati,Dawn. 2006. "Decentralization: Fueling the Fire or Dampening the Flames of Ethnic Conflict and Secessionism." International Organization 60(3):651-685.

Berman, Eli, and Aila M. Matanock. 2015. “The Empiricists’ Insurgency.” Annual Review of Political Science 18(1): 443-464.

Caprioli, Mary. "Primed for violence: The role of gender inequality in predicting internal conflict." International Studies Quarterly 49.2 (2005): 161-178.

Chenoweth, Erica, and Maria J. Stephan. Why civil resistance works: The strategic logic of nonviolent conflict. Columbia University Press, 2011.

Christia, Fotini. Alliance Formation in Civil Wars. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2012.

Cohen, Dara Kay. Rape During Civil War. Cornell University Press, 2016.

Coleman, Katharina P. 2007. International Organisations and Peace Enforcement. Cambridge, Eng.: Cambridge University Press.

Collier, Paul, and Anke Hoeffler. "Greed and grievance in civil war." Oxford economic papers 56.4 (2004): 563-595.

Cunningham, Kathleen Gallagher. Inside the Politics of Self-determination. Oxford University Press, 2014.

Cunningham, Kathleen Gallagher, Kristin M. Bakke, and Lee JM Seymour. "Shirts today, skins tomorrow: Dual contests and the effects of fragmentation in self-determination disputes." Journal of Conflict Resolution 56.1 (2012): 67-93.

Finnemore, Martha. The Purpose of Intervention: Changing Beliefs about the Use of Force. Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 2004. Chapters 1, 3-5.

Fortna, Virginia Page. 2003. "Scraps of Paper? Agreements and the Durability of Peace." International Organization 57(1): 337-372.

Harbom, Lotta, Stina Högbladh, and Peter Wallensteen. 2006. "Armed Conflict and Peace Agreements." Journal of Peace Research 43(5).

Hartzell, Caroline A. and Matthew Hoddie. 2003. "Institutionalizing Peace: Power Sharing and Post-Civil War Conflict Management." American Journal of Political Science 47(2): 318–332.

Hartzell, Caroline A. and Matthew Hoddie. 2007. Crafting Peace. Powersharing Institutions and the Negotiated Settlement of Civil Wars. University Park, PA: Pennsylvania State University Press.

Hegre, Håvard, Tanja Ellingsen, Scott Gates, and Nils Petter Gleditsch. 2001. "Toward a Democratic Civil Peace? Democracy, Political Change, and Civil War, 1816–1992."  American Political Science Review 95(1): 33–48.

Kaldor, Mary, and Fen O. Hampson. "New & Old Wars: Organized Violence in a Global Era." International Journal 54.4 (1999): 706.

Kalyvas, Stathis N., and Laia Balcells."International system and technologies of rebellion: How the end of the cold war shaped internal conflict." American Political Science Review 104.03 (2010): 415-429.

Matanock, Aila M. 2016. “Using Violence, Seeking Votes: Introducing the Militant Group Electoral Participation (MGEP) Dataset.” Journal of Peace Research 53(6): 845-853.

Murdie, Amanda and Dursun Peksen. “The Impact of Human Rights INGO Shaming on Humanitarian Interventions.” The Journal of Politics, Vol. 76, No. 1 (Nov. 22, 2013), pp. 215-228

Parkinson, Sarah Elizabeth. "Organizing rebellion: Rethinking high-risk mobilization and social networks in war." American Political Science Review 107.03 (2013): 418-432.

Pearlman, Wendy. "Emotions and the Microfoundations of the Arab Uprisings." Perspectives on Politics 11.02 (2013): 387-409.

Power, Samantha. “Bystanders to Genocide: Why the United States Let the Rwandan Tragedy Happen,” The Atlantic Monthly (September 2001), pp. 84-108.

Power, Samantha. A Problem from Hell: America and the Age of Genocide. New York: Harper Collins, 2002.

Ritter, Emily and Nathan Danneman. "Contagious Rebellion and Preemptive Repression." Journal of Conflict Resolution 58 (2): 254-279.

Ritter, Emily and Gina Lei Miller. "Emigrants and the Onset of Civil War." 2014. Journal of Peace Research 51 (1): 51-64.

Ritter, Emily. “Policy Disputes, Political Survival, and the Onset and Severity of State Repression.” 2014. Journal of Conflict Resolution 58 (1): 143-168.

Stewart, Megan A. and Yu-Ming Liou. "Do Good Borders Make Good Rebels? A Natural Experiment of Territorial Control and Civilian Casualties" Journal of Politics. 2017.

Toft, Monica Duffy. Securing the peace: the durable settlement ofcivilwars. Princeton University Press, 2009.

Walter, Barbara F. Committing to peace: The successful settlement of civil wars. Princeton University Press, 2002.

Wood, Elisabeth Jean. Insurgent collective action and civil war in El Salvador. Cambridge University Press, 2003.

Wood, Elisabeth Jean. "The social processes of civil war: The wartime transformation of social networks." Annu. Rev. Polit. Sci. 11 (2008): 539-561.

 

International Institutions

Barnett, Michael N., and Martha Finnemore. "The politics, power, and pathologies of international organizations." International organization 53.4 (1999)

Barnett, Michael and Martha Finnemore. 2004. Rules for the World: International Organizations in Global Politics. Ithaca: Cornell University Press.

von Borzyskowski, Inken. 2016. “Resisting Democracy Assistance: Who Seeks and Receives Technical Election Assistance?” 2016. Review of International Organizations 11 (2): 247-282.

Caraway, Teri L., Stephanie J. Rickard, and Mark S. Anner. "International negotiations and domestic politics: The case of IMF labor market conditionality." International Organization 66.01 (2012): 27-61.

Carnegie, Allison. "States held hostage: Political hold-up problems and the effects of international institutions." American Political Science Review 108.01 (2014): 54-70.

Cini, Michelle. "European Commission reform and the origins of the European Transparency Initiative." Journal of European Public Policy 15.5 (2008): 743-760.

Cini, Michelle. From integration to integrity: Administrative ethics and reform in the European Commission. Manchester University Press, 2007.

Dai, Xinyuan. "Why comply? The domestic constituency mechanism." International Organization 59.2 (2005): 363-398.

Donno, Daniela. "Who is punished? Regional intergovernmental organizations and the enforcement of democratic norms." International Organization 64.04 (2010): 593-625.

Elkins, Zachary, Andrew T. Guzman, and Beth A. Simmons. "Competing for capital: The diffusion of bilateral investment treaties, 1960–2000." International organization 60.04 (2006): 811-846.

Graham, Erin R. "Money and multilateralism: how funding rules constitute IO governance." International Theory 7.01 (2015): 162-194.

Hyde, Susan D. "The observer effectin international politics: Evidence from a natural experiment." World Politics 60.01 (2007): 37-63.

Johnson, Tana. Organizational progeny: Why governments are losing control over the proliferating structures of global governance. Oxford University Press, USA, 2014.

Kelley, Judith. "Assessing the complex evolution of norms: the rise of international election monitoring." International Organization 62.02 (2008): 221-255.

Koremenos, Barbara. “Contracting around International Uncertainty,” American Political Science Review 99: 549-65, November 2005.

Koremenos, Barbara. “Loosening the Ties that Bind: A Learning Model of Agreement Flexibility,” International Organization 55, 2: 289-325, Spring 2001.

Koremenos, Barbara, Charles Lipson, and Duncan Snidal. "The Rational Design of International Institutions." International Organization, Vol. 55, No. 4.

Martin, Lisa L. "Interests, power, and multilateralism." International Organization 46.04 (1992): 765-792.

Pevehouse, Jon and Inken von Borzyskowski. 2016. "International Organizations in World Politics." In The Oxford Handbook of International Organizations, edited by Jacob Katz Cogan, Ian Hurd, and Ian Johnstone, pp. 3-32.

Sell, Susan K. Private power, public law: the globalization of intellectual property rights. Vol. 88. Cambridge University Press, 2003.

Simmons, Beth A., and Lisa L. Martin. "International organizations and institutions." Handbook of international relations (2002): 192-211.

Simmons,Beth. "Treaty compliance and violation." Annual Review of Political Science 13 (2010): 273-296.

Felicity Vabulas and Duncan Snidal. 2013. "Organization without delegation: Informal intergovernmental organizations IIGOs) and the spectrum of intergovernmental arrangements."

Review of International Organizations 8 (2): 193-220.

Verdun, Amy. "The role of the Delors Committee in the creation of EMU: an epistemic community?." Journal of European Public Policy 6.2 (1999): 308-328.

Von Stein, Jana. "Do treaties constrain or screen? Selection bias and treaty compliance." American Political Science Review 99.04 (2005): 611-622.

Wellhausen, Rachel L. "Investor–state disputes: when can governments break contracts?." Journal of Conflict Resolution 59.2 (2015): 239-261.

 

International Law and Human Rights

Bhabha, Jacqueline. Child migration and human rights in a global age. Princeton University Press, 2014.

Bozeman, Adda Bruemmer. The future of law in a multicultural world. Princeton University Press, 2015.

Çali, Basak. International Law for International Relations. Oxford University Press, 2009.

Çali, Basak. The Authority of International Law: Obedience, Respect, and Rebuttal. Oxford University Press, 2015.

Clark, Ann Marie. Diplomacy of conscience: Amnesty International and changing human rights norms. Princeton University Press, 2010.

Fazal, Tanisha M. "Dead Wrong?: Battle Deaths, Military Medicine, and Exaggerated Reports of War's Demise." International Security 39.1 (2014): 95-125.

Fowler, Michael Ross, and Julie Marie Bunck. Law, power, and the sovereign state: the evolution and application of the concept of sovereignty. Penn State Press, 2010

Guerrina, Roberta and Marysia Zalewski. “Negotiating Difference/Negotiating Rights: The challenges and opportunities of women’s human rights” The Review of International Studies, 33.1 (2007) 5-10.

Howard, Rhoda E. and Jack Donnelly, “Human Rights in World Politics” (A&J, pp. 362-372)

Powell, Emilia Justyna, and Jeffrey K. Staton. 2009. "Domestic Judicial Institutions and Human Rights Treaty Violation." International Studies Quarterly 53 (1):149–74.

Sikkink, Kathryn and Carrie Booth Walling. “The Impact of Human Rights Trials in Latin America.” Journal of Peace Research, Vol. 44 (2007): 427-445.

Simmons, Beth A. 2009. Mobilizing for Human Rights: International Law in Domestic Politics. New York: Cambridge University Press.

Sikkink, Kathryn. Evidence for Hope: Making Human Rights Work in the 21st Century. Princeton University Press, 2017.

Simmons, Beth A., and Allison Danner. "Credible commitments and the international criminal court." International Organization 64.02 (2010): 225-256.

Snyder, Jack and Leslie Vinjamuri. “Trials and Errors: Principles and Pragmatism in Strategies of International Justice.” International Security, Vol. 28, No.3, Winter 2003/04, pp. 5-44.

Risse, Thomas, Stephen C. Ropp and Kathryn Sikkink. The Power of Human Rights: International Norms and Domestic Change.  New York: Cambridge University Press, 1999.

Ritter, Emily and Courtenay R. Conrad. “Treaties, Tenure, and Torture: The Conflicting Domestic Effects of International Law.” 2013. The Journal of Politics 75 (2): 397-409.

 

Peacekeeping

Autessere,Séverine. The Trouble withthe Congo: Local Violence and the Failure of International Peacebuilding. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2010.

Beber, Bernd, et al. "Peacekeeping, Compliance with International Norms, and Transactional Sex in Monrovia, Liberia." International Organization 71.1 (2017): 1-30.

Bliesemann de Guevarra, Berit. Statebuilding and State-Formation: The Political Sociology of Intervention. Routledge, 2012.

Hameiri, Shahar, et al. International Intervention and Local Politics. Cambridge University Press, 2017.

Fortna, Virginia Page. Does Peacekeeping Work? Shaping Belligerents’ Choices after Civil War. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2008.

Fortna, Virginia Page. 2004. "Does Peacekeeping Keep Peace? International Intervention and the Duration of Peace after Civil War." International Studies Quarterly 48(2): 269-292.

Fortna, Virginia Page, and Lise Morjé Howard. "Pitfalls and Prospects in the Peacekeeping Literature." Annual Review Political Science 11 (2008): 283-301

Howard, Lise Morjé. UN Peacekeeping in Civil Wars, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2008.

Hultman, Lisa. "UN Peace Operations and Protection of Civilians: Cheap Talk or Norm Implementation?," Journal of Peace Research 50, no. 1 (2013): 59-73.

Karim, Sabrina, and Kyle Beardsley. Equal Opportunity Peacekeeping: Women, Peace, and Security in Post-Conflict States. Oxford University Press, 2017.

Karim, Sabrina, and Kyle Beardsley. "Explaining sexual exploitation and abuse in peacekeeping missions :The role of female peacekeepers and gender equality in contributing countries." Journal of Peace Research 53.1 (2016): 100-115.

Karim, Sabrina, and Kyle Beardsley. "Female peacekeepers and gender balancing: Token gestures or informed policymaking?." International Interactions 39.4 (2013): 461-488.

Karim, Sabrina. "Reevaluating Peacekeeping Effectiveness: Does Gender Neutrality Inhibit Progress?." International Interactions (2016): 1-26.

Matanock, Aila M. 2017. “Bullets for Ballots: Electoral Participation Provisions in Peace Agreements and Conflict Recurrence.” International Security 41(4): 93-132. 

Owens, Patricia. Economy of Force:Counterinsurgency and the Historical Rise of the Social. Cambridge University Press, 2015

Sabaratnam, Meera. Decolonizing Intervention: International Statebuilding in Mozambique. Rowman & Littlefield International, 2017.

Terry, Fiona. Condemnedto Repeat?: The paradox of humanitarian action. Cornell University Press, 2013.

Von Billerbeck, Sarah. Whose Peace? Local Ownership and United Nations Peacekeeping. Oxford University Press, 2012.

Whalan, Jeni. How Peace Operations Work:Power, Legitimacy, and Effectiveness. Oxford University Press, 2014.

Zanotti, Laura. Governing disorder: UN peace operations, international security, and democratization in the post–Cold War era. Penn State Press, 2011.

 

Foreign Aid

Bermeo, Sarah Blodgett. "Foreign aidand regime change: a role for donor intent." World Development 39.11 (2011): 2021-2031.

Bermeo, Sarah Blodgett. "Aid is not oil: Donor utility, heterogeneous aid, and the aid-democratization relationship." International Organization 70.01 (2016): 1-32.

Girod, Desha M. “Effective Foreign Aid Following Civil War: The Nonstrategic-Desperation Hypothesis.” American Journal of Political Science. Volume 56, Issue 1, pages 188–201, January 2012.

Girod, Desha M., and Jennifer L. Tobin. "Take the Money and Run: The determinants of compliance withaid agreements." International Organization 70.01 (2016): 209-239.

Lankina, Tomila, Alexander Libman, and Anastassia Obydenkova.“Authoritarian and Democratic Diffusion in Post-Communist Regions.”Comparative Political Studies 49.12 (2016):1599-1629.

Lankina, Tomila V., and Lullit Getachew. “A Geographic Incremental Theory of Democratization: Territory, Aid, and Democracy in Post-Communist Regions.”World Politics 58.4(2006):536-582.

Milner, Helen V., and Dustin H. Tingley. "The political economy of US foreign aid: American legislators and the domestic politics of aid." Economics & Politics 22.2 (2010): 200-232.

Smith, Lida. Spaces of Aid: How Cars, Compounds and Hotels Shape Humanitarianism. Zed Books, 2015.

 

Climate Change

Schroeder, Miriam. "The Construction of China's Climate Politics: transnational NGOs and the spiral model of international relations." Cambridge Review of International Affairs 21.4 (2008): 505-525.

Tuchman Matthews, Jessica. 1989. “Redefining Security.” Foreign Affairs. Vol. 68, No. 2, pp. 162-177.

 

Rise of China

Foot, Rosemary, and Andrew Walter. China, the United States, and Global Order. Cambridge University Press, 2010.

Flores-Macías, Gustavo A., and Sarah E. Kreps. "The Foreign Policy Consequences of Trade: China’s commercial relations with Africa and Latin America, 1992–2006." The Journal of Politics 75.2 (2013): 357-371.

Larson, Deborah Welch, and Alexei Shevchenko. "Status seekers: Chinese and Russian responses to US primacy." International Security 34.4 (2010): 63-95.

Paus, Eva. "The rise of China: implications for Latin American development." Development Policy Review 27.4 (2009): 419-456.

Weiss, Jessica Chen. "Authoritarian Signaling, Mass Audiences, and Nationalist Protest in China." International Organization 67.01 (2013): 1-35.

 

IR from a Global Perspective

Lawrence, Adria. "Triggering Nationalist Violence: Competition and conflictin uprisings against colonial rule." International Security 35.2 (2010): 88-122.

Miller, Manjari. Wronged by Empire: Post-imperial ideology and foreign policy in India and China. Stanford University Press, 2013.

Zarakol, Ayse. After Defeat: How the East learned to live with the West. Vol. 118. Cambridge University Press, 2010.

 

US Foreign Policy

Arnson, Cynthia. Crossroads: Congress, the President, and Central America, 1976-1993. Penn State Press, 1993.

Chaudoin, Stephen, Helen V. Milner, and Dustin H. Tingley. "The Center Still Holds: Liberal internationalism survives." International Security 35.1 (2010): 75-94.

Howard, Lise Morjé. "US Foreign Policy Habits in Ethnic Conflict." International Studies Quarterly 59.4 (2015): 721-734.

Ikenberry, G. John, Thomas J. Knock, Anne-Marie Slaughter & Tony Smith. The Crisis of American Foreign Policy: Wilsonianism in the Twenty-first Century. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2009.

Martin, Lisa L. "The President and International Commitments: Treaties as signaling devices." Presidential Studies Quarterly 35.3 (2005): 440-465.

Milner, Helen V., and Dustin Tingley. Sailing the water's edge: The domestic politics of American foreign policy. Princeton University Press, 2015.

Saunders, Elizabeth. Leaders at War: how presidents shape military interventions. Cornell University Press, 2011.

Saunders, Elizabeth. "War and the Inner Circle: Democratic elites and the politics of using force." SecurityStudies 24.3 (2015): 466-501.

Sikkink, Kathryn.Mixed Signals: U.S. Human Rights Policy and Latin America. Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 2004.

Stanley, Elizabeth A. "Ending the Korean War: The role of domestic coalition shifts in overcoming obstacles to peace." International Security 34.1 (2009): 42-82.

 

Revistes i Anuaris

 -          Afers Internacionals (CIDOB)

-          Alerta 20...! Informe sobre conflictos, derechos humanos y construcción de paz (Escola de Cultura de Pau de la UAB)

-          Anuario 20... de Procesos de Paz (Escola de Cultura de Pau de la UAB)

-          Anuario CEIPAZ, edición anual

-          Anuario Internacional CIDOB edición anual

-          Cooperation and Conflict

-          El estado del mundo, Madrid: Ed. Akal, edición anual.

-          European Journal of International Relations (UK)

-          Foreign Affairs (USA)

-          Foreign Affairs Latinoamérica (Méxic)

-          Foreign Policy – Edición Española (Espanya)

-          International Affairs (UK)

-         International Organization (USA)

-          International Security (USA)

-          International Studies Quarterly

-          Keesing’s World New Archives (www.keesings.com)

-          Le Monde Diplomatique (França-Espanya)

-          Política Exterior (Espanya)

-          Revista Electrònica d’Estudis internacionals (Espanya): http://www.reei.org

-          Review of International Studies (UK)

-          Third World Quarterly (UK)

-          La Vanguardia Dossier (Espanya)

-         World Politics (USA)

-          The World Today (UK)

Pàgines web

-        Amnistia Internacional: http://www.a-i.es/

-        Asociación Española de Ciencia política: enlaces útiles con universidades de todo el mundo: http://www.aecpa.es/

-        Banc Mundial: http://www.bancomundial.org/

-        Centro de Investigación sobre la Paz: http://www.cip.fuhem.es/

-        Centro de educación e investigación para la pazwww.ceipaz.org

-        CIDOB: http://www.cidob.es

-        Escola de Cultura de Pau (UAB): http://www.pangea.org/unescopau/

-        European Council on Foreign Relations: http://www.ecfr.eu/

-        FIRST(Facts on International Relations and Security Trends) - http://first.sipri.org/

-        Fons Monetari Internacional: http://www.imf.org/external/spa/index.htm

-        Foreign Affairs - http://www.foreignaffairs.org/

-        Foreign Affairs Latinoamérica – http://fal.itam.mx/FAE/

-        Foreign Policy – Edición Española - http://www.fp-es.org

-        Heidelberg Institute of International Conflict Research  (HIIK) - http://www.hiik.de/en/index.htm

-        Historiasiglo20.org – http://www.historiasiglo20.org

-        Human Rights Watch, web sobre sobre derechos humanos: http://www.hrw.org/

-        Institut for War and Peace Reporting: http://www.iwpr.net/

-        International Affairs Resources (www virtual library) - http://www.etown.edu/vl/

-        International Relations andSecurity Network - http://www.isn.ethz.ch/

-        Le Monde Diplomatique: http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/

-        Nacions Unides:  http://www.un.org/spanish

-        Observatori de Política Exterior Europea de l’Institut Universitari d’Estudis Europeus (IUEE): http://www.iuee.eu

-        Open Democracy: http://www.opendemocracy.com/home/index.jsp

-        Organització per la Cooperació Econòmica i el Desenvolupament (OECD): http://www.oecd.org

-        Organización para la Seguridad y la Cooperación en Europa. http://www.osce.org/

-        OTAN: http://www.nato.int/home.htm

-        Política internacional a Internet: http://www.diplomaticnet.com/es/

-        Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI): http://www.sipri.org/

-        The Swedish Institute of International Affairs - http://www.ui.se/

-        Unió Europea: http://europa.eu/