Enthält Rezension von: Mearsheimer, John J. ; Walt, Stephen M.: The Israel Lobby and U.S. foreign policy. - New York/N.Y. : Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2007
Armstrong, D.: On revolutionary chickens and international eggs. - S. 669-674. Gonzalez-Gomez, R.: The pertinence of revolution. - S. 675-681. Mann, M.: Communism, fascism and counter-revolution in world politics. - S. 683-686. Walt, S. M.: Nothing revolutionary. - S. 687-692. Halliday, F.: The great anomaly. - S. 693-699
Brawley, M.; Martin, P.: Kosovo, alliance politics, and the future of NATO. - S. 1-7. Walt, S. M.: NATO's future (in theory). - S. 11-25. MacFarlane, S. N.: Challenges to Euro-Atlantic security. - S. 27-40. Henrikson, A. K.: The constraint of legitimacy. The legal and institutional framework of Euro-Atlantic security. - S. 41-55
Sullivan, B. R.: World of great powers. - S. 1-51. Clawson, P. L.: Environment. - S. 53-81. Walt, S. M.: Coalitions. - S. 83-114. Libicki, M. C.: Technology and warfare. - S. 115-146
Vasquez, John A.: The realist paradigm and degenerative versus progressive research programs: an appraisal of neotraditional research on Waltz's balancing proposition. - S. 899-912. Waltz, Kenneth N.: Evaluating theories. - S. 913-917. Christensen, Thomas J.; Snyder, Jack: Progressive research on degenerate alliances. - S. 919-922. Elman, Colin; Fendius Elman, Miriam: Lakatos and Neorealism: a reply to Vasquez. - S. 923-926. Schweller, Randall L.: New realist research on alliances: refining, not refuting, Waltz's balancing proposition. - S. 927-930. Walt, Stephen M.: The progressive power of realism. - S. 931-935
Ikenberry, G. John ; Mastanduno, Michael ; Wohlforth, William C.: Introduction: unipolarity, state behavior, and systemic consequences. - S. 1-27 Wohlforth, William C.: Unipolarity, status competition, and great power war. - S. 28-57 Finnemore, Martha: Legitimacy, hypocrisy, and the social structure of unipolarity: why being a unipole isn't all it's cracked up to be. - S. 58-85 Walt, Stephen Martin: Alliances in a unipolar world. - S. 86-120 Mastanduno, Michael: System marker and privilege taker: U.S. power and the international political economy. - S. 121-154 Snyder, Jack ; Shapiro, Robert Y. ; Bloch-Elkon, Yaeli: Free hand abroad, divide and rule at home. - S. 155-187 Jervis, Robert: Unipolarity: a structural perspective. - S. 188-213
1. Introduction 7. - Part I: The American Experience with Diplomacy and Military Restraint. - 2. Chapter I: Orphaned Diplomats: The American Struggle to Match Diplomacy with Power 13. - 3. Chapter II: Between Power and Partnership: The Prudent Uses of Multilateralism 31. - 4. Chapter III: Is a Grand Strategy of Restraint Politically Feasible Today? Major Roadblocks to a Prudent Foreign Policy 57. - Part II: Nonkinetic Power and Contemporary National Security Challenges. - 5. Chapter IV:Using U.S. Leverage to Abate Conflicts That Harm U.S. Security 77. - 6. Chapter V: Without Conditions: The Case for Negotiating with the Enemy 91. - 7. Chapter VI:Economic Sanctions and the Prudent Use of Power 97. - 8. Chapter VII: Cold War Two?: The (Il)logic of a Struggle with China for Resources in the Developing World 115. - Part III: Liquidating Military Commitments. - 9. Chapter VIII: Cutting Losses in Wars of Choice: Obstacles and Strategies 131. - 10. Chapter IX: A U.S. Military Withdrawal from the Greater Middle East: Impact on Terrorism 157. - 11. Chapter X: How Damaging are Worst-Case Scenarios in the Persian Gulf? 175