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From rights to responsibilities: rethinking interventions for humanitarian purposes
In: PSIS special studies 7
Die Krise der deutschen Staatslehre im Schatten des Rechtspositivismus: Hans J. Morgenthau und die Kelsensche Normenlehre
In: Macht, Recht, Demokratie, S. 27-44
Politics Among Nations: Ein Klassiker des klassischen Realismus?
In: Zeitschrift für Politik: ZfP ; Organ der Hochschule für Politik München, Band 60, Heft 4, S. 452-460
ISSN: 0044-3360
Politics Among Nations: Ein Klassiker des klassischen Realismus?
In: Zeitschrift für Politik: ZfP, Band 60, Heft 4, S. 452-460
ISSN: 0044-3360
Echoes of a Forgotten Past: Mid-Century Realism and the Legacy of International Law
In: Ethics & international affairs, Band 26, Heft 3, S. 373-386
ISSN: 1747-7093
Those studying the work of Hans J. Morgenthau, widely considered the "founding father" of the Realist School of International Relations, have long been baffled by his views on world government and the attainment of a world state—views that, it would appear, are strikingly incompatible with the author's realism. In a 1965 article in World Politics, James P. Speer II decided that it could only be "theoretical confusion" that explained why Morgenthau could on the one hand advocate a world state as ultimately necessary in his highly successful textbook, Politics Among Nations, while writing elsewhere that world government could not resolve the conflict between the Soviet Union and the United States by peaceful means. According to Speer,
Morgenthau posits at the international level a super-Hobbesian predicament, in which the actors on the world scene are motivated by the lust for power, yet he proposes a gradualist Lockean solution whereby the international system will move, through a resurrected diplomacy, out of a precarious equilibrium of balance-of-power anarchy by a "revaluation of all values" into the "moral and political" bonds of world community, a process whose capstone will be the formal-legal institutions of world government.
This oscillation between Hobbes and Locke, Speer asserted, must be the result of Morgenthau's "commitment to the organismic mystique that comes out of German Romantic Nationalism," although he admitted in a footnote that his reflections on the intellectual sources of Morgenthau's theories were "mere speculation."
Echoes of a Forgotten Past: Mid-Century Realism and the Legacy of International Law
In: Ethics & international affairs, Band 26, Heft 3, S. 373-386
ISSN: 0892-6794
Morgenthau and the Return to Ethics in a Realist Theory of Power Politics
In: Cooperation and conflict: journal of the Nordic International Studies Association, Band 41, Heft 4, S. 463-469
ISSN: 1460-3691
Morgenthau and the Return to Ethics in a Realist Theory of Power Politics
In: Cooperation and conflict: journal of the Nordic International Studies Association, Band 41, Heft 4, S. 463-469
ISSN: 0010-8367
Book Review: Tragedy and the Realist Pigeonhole in International Relations
In: Cooperation and conflict: journal of the Nordic International Studies Association, Band 40, Heft 2, S. 233-241
ISSN: 1460-3691
Book Review: Tragedy and the Realist Pigeonhole in International Relations
In: Cooperation and conflict: journal of the Nordic International Studies Association, Band 40, Heft 2, S. 233-242
ISSN: 0010-8367
Urban safety and peacebuilding: new perspectives on sustaining peace in the city
In: Studies in conflict, development and peacebuilding
Urban safety and peacebuilding: new perspectives on sustaining peace in the city
In: Studies in conflict, development and peacebuilding
This volume draws together original research related to conceptual and practical advances at the interface of urban safety and peacebuilding.The book reflects the advances in urban safety and peacebuilding to help address the rapidly increasing risk of conflict and insecurity in cities. Specifically, it draws on contributions to the Technical Working Group on the Confluence of Urban Safety and Peacebuilding Practice, an informal expert network co-facilitated by the United Nations Office at Geneva, UN-Habitat's Safer Cities Programme, and the Geneva Peacebuilding Platform. A focus on 'sustaining peace' serves as a framework for situating new policy responses against conflict, violence, and exclusion in the city, and for promoting a conversation across disciplinary and specialist silos. The volume thereby broadens the optic of peacebuilding practice beyond interstate and intrastate armed conflicts - and especially their aftermath - and reconnects it to the community-level origins of building peace. The analysis and practice presented here will remind those willing to work towards peaceful and inclusive cities that there are tried and tested approaches available, and a host of experts and practitioners ready to accompany those prepared to lead in their respective contexts.This book will be of interest to students and researchers in the fields of peacebuilding, urban studies, security studies, and international relations.
Peacebuilding: A Review of the Academic Literature
In: White Paper Series No.13, Geneva Peacebuilding Platform, 2015
SSRN
Editors' Introduction
In: Security dialogue, Band 36, Heft 4, S. 427-428
ISSN: 1460-3640