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List of Figures page xi
List of Tables xv
Acknowledgments xvi
1 The Nature in and Nature of International Relations 1
2 Lesser Angels: Moral Condemnation and Binding
Morality in International Relations 31
3 Mankind Is What Anarchy Makes of It: The Material
Origins of Ethics 65
4 See No Evil, Speak No Evil? Cross-National Micro- and
Macrofoundational Evidence of Morality’s Ubiquity 98
5 To Provide and to Protect: A Dual-Process Model of
Foreign Policy Ideology for a Dangerous
or Competitive World 128
6 Just Desserts in the Desert: Fairness, Status, and
Wilhelmine Foreign Policy during the Moroccan Crises 149
7 Barking Dogs and Beating Drums: Nationalism as Moral
Revolution in German Foreign Policy 198
8 Biting the Bullet: Binding Morality, Rationality, and the
Domestic Politics of War Termination in Germany during
World War I 232
9 Dying in Vain: Authoritarian Morality Causes the German
Empire to Collapse 271
10 Daily Bread: Hitler, Moral Devolution, and Nazi
Foreign Policy 296
11 From Demonizing to Dehumanizing: War under Hitler
and the Implications for Humankind 336
Index 368

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Right and wronged in international relations : evolutionary ethics, moral revolutions, and the nature of power politics 이용현황 표 - 등록번호, 청구기호, 권별정보, 자료실, 이용여부로 구성 되어있습니다.
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Brian Rathbun argues against the prevailing wisdom on morality in international relations, both the commonly held belief that foreign affairs is an amoral realm and the opposing concept that norms have gradually civilized an unethical world. By focusing on how states respond to being wronged rather than when they do right, Rathbun shows that morality is and always has been virtually everywhere in international relations - in the perception of threat, the persistence of conflict, the judgment of domestic audiences, and the articulation of expansionist goals. The inescapability of our moral impulses owes to their evolutionary origins in helping individuals solve recurrent problems in their anarchic environment. Through archival case studies of German foreign policy; the analysis of enormous corpora of text; and surveys of Russian, Chinese, and American publics, this book reorients how we think about the role of morality in international relations.