1. Politics and Science.-2. Politics and Value, Part 1.-3. Politics and Value, Part 2.-4. The Scientist, the Moralist, and the Historian.-5.The States System.-6.The Balance of Power.-7. The Development of the Liberal Tradition, Part 1.-8. The Development of the Liberal Tradition, Part 2.-9. The Development of the Liberal Tradition, Part 3.-10. The Problem of Community.-11. The American Alliance System.-12. Democratic Theory and International Relations
Whittle Johnston lived from 1927 to 1996, serving on the faculty of
the School of International Service at American University, USA,
Swarthmore College, USA, Johns Hopkins University, USA, and the
University of Virginia, USA. He published on a wide variety
of subjects in journals such as the Journal of Politics, Orbis, and
The National Interest, but his main concern was always the enduring
problem of maintaining order with justice in a world environment
often driven by concerns of power. His works on E.H. Carr, Woodrow
Wilson, and American policy in the Cold War all carried this
stamp.
David Clinton is Professor and Chair of Political Science at Baylor
University, USA. He has held appointments at Tulane University,
USA, Colgate University, USA, Kansas State University, USA,
Hamilton College, USA, and Union College, USA, and has served as a
visiting scholar at St. Andrews University, Scotland, and at the
University of Wales at Aberystwyth. He is the author of
Tocqueville, Lieber, and Bagehot: Liberalism Confronts the World
and The Realist Tradition and Contemporary International
Relations.
Stephen Sims is a Lecturer in Political Science at Baylor
University, USA, who has written on the relationship of political
philosophy and international relations theory. In addition to
publishing several essays with the Classics of Strategy and
Diplomacy project, he is working on a current book manuscript with
the working title of "Justice, Prudence, and Foreign Relations in
Aristotle's Political Thought."
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