VOLUME ONE: DOING HISTORICAL INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
Part One: Classic Takes
Why Is There No International Theory?
Martin Wight
International Relations: The Long Road to Theory
Stanley Hoffmann
International Relations and the Relevance of History
Arthur Gilbert
Part Two: Reconceptualizations
History and Structure in the Theory of International Relations
Rob Walker
Diplomatic History and International Relations Theory: Respecting Difference and Crossing Boundaries
Colin Elman and Miriam Elman
The Pragmatics of International History
Donald Puchala
The Historical Problem in International Relations
Thomas Smith
Still ‘Marking Time’? Text, Discourse and Truth in International History
Patrick Finney
Part Three: Ways of Doing Historical International Relations
On the Historical Imagination of International Relations: The Case for a ‘Deweyan Reconstruction’
Jonathan Isacoff
What’s at Stake in ‘Bringing Historical Sociology Back’ into International Relations? Transcending ‘Chronofetishism’ and ‘Tempocentrism’ in International Relations
John Hobson
International Relations and the ‘Problem of History’
Nick Vaughan-Williams
History, Action and Identity: Revisiting the ‘Second’ Great Debate and Assessing Its Importance for Social Theory
Friedrich Kratochwil
Narrative Explanation and International Relations: Back to Basics
Hidemi Suganami
What Is History in International Relations?
John Hobson and George Lawson
What’s at Stake in the Historical Turn? Theory, Practice and Phronesis in International Relations
David McCourt
VOLUME TWO: THE HISTORY OF INTERNATIONAL THOUGHT
Part One: Rethinking International Thought
The International Turn in Intellectual History
David Armitage
Why International Relations Theorists Should Stop Reading Thucydides
David Welch
Justus Lipsius, Political Humanism and the Disciplining of 17th Century Statecraft
Halvard Leira
The Forgotten Prophet: Tom Paine’s Cosmopolitanism and International Relations
Thomas Walker
Justice, Order and Anarchy: The International Political Theory of Pierre-Joseph Proudhon (1809-1865)
Alex Pritchard
Part Two: International Relations before the Discipline
Birth of a Discipline
Robert Vitalis
Origins and Originality: IR Scholarship before World War I
Torbjørn Knutsen
Feminism, War and the Prospects for Peace
Lucian Ashworth
Part Three: Reconceptualizing Disciplinary History
The Myth of the ‘First Great Debate’
Peter Wilson
Lessons from the Past: Reassessing the Interwar Disciplinary History of International Relations
Brian Schmidt
Who Killed the International Studies Conference?
David Long
The Construction of an Edifice: The Story of a First Great Debate
Joel Quirk and Darshan Vigneswaran
The Realist Gambit: Postwar American Political Science and the Birth of IR Theory
Nicolas Guilhot
Writing the World: Disciplinary History and Beyond
Duncan Bell
The Big Bangs of IR: The Myths That Your Teachers Still Tell You about 1648 and 1919
Benjamin de Carvalho, Halvard Leira and John Hobson
VOLUME THREE: THE STATE IN HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE
Part One: Classic Takes
State Formation and State Building in Europe
Thomas Ertman
Reflections on the History of European State-Making
Charles Tilly
The Absolutist State in the West
Perry Anderson
The Autonomous Power of the State: Its Origins, Mechanisms, and Results
Michael Mann
The Rise and Demise of the Territorial State
John Herz
Part Two: Reconceptualizations
Approaches to the State: Alternative Conceptions and Historical Dynamics
Stephen Krasner
Reformation, Counter-Reformation, and the Early Modern State: A Reassessment
Wolfgang Reinhard
Culture in Rational-Choice Theories of State Formation
Julia Adams
Body and Soul: Calvinism, Discipline, and State Power in Early Modern Europe Modern Europe
Philip Gorski
Part Three: Beyond the European Experience
The Latin American Puzzle and Wars and Nation States in Latin America
Miguel Angel Centeno
War and the State in Africa
Jeffrey Herbst
Part Four: Reflections
On the Ontological Status of the State
Erik Ringmar
The Territorial Trap: The Geographical Assumptions of International Relations Theory
John Agnew
Sovereignty as Symbolic Form
Jens Bartelson`
Polities Past and Present
Yale Ferguson and Richard Mansbach
VOLUME FOUR: THE STATE SYSTEM IN HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE
Part One: Nature and Emergence
Systems of States
Adam Watson
The Concept of Order in World Politics
Hedley Bull
Sovereignty, International Relations, and the Westphalian Myth
Andreas Osiander
Of Systems, Boundaries and Territoriality: An Inquiry into the Formation of the State System
Friedrich Kratochwil
Territoriality and Beyond: Problematizing Modernity in International Relations
John Ruggie
Agraria and Industria: Two Models of the International System
George Modelski
Part Two: Facets of the International System
Institutional Selection in International Relations: State Anarchy as Order
Hendrik Spruyt
Testing Balance-of-Power Theory in World History
William Wohlforth et al.
Gendering Sovereignty: Marriage and International Relations in Elizabethan Times
Diana Saco
The Altered State and the State of Nature—The French Revolution and International Politics
Mlada Bukovansky
Japan’s Socialization into Janus-Faced European International Society
Shogo Suzuki
Part Three: The Problem of Empires
From International Law to Imperial Constitutions: The Problem of Quasi-Sovereignty, 1870–1900
Lauren Benton
What's at Stake in the American Empire Debate
Daniel Nexon and Thomas Wright
Part Four: Rethinking Change
Rethinking Benchmark Dates in International Relations
Barry Buzan and George Lawson