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Order and Violence J. D. B. Miller (Executive Director, Executive Director, The Academy of the Social Sciences in Australia)

Order and Violence By J. D. B. Miller (Executive Director, Executive Director, The Academy of the Social Sciences in Australia)

Summary

Hedley Bull, Professor of International Relations at Oxford from 1977 until his death in 1985, wrote within a tradition of political thought which dates back to Hobbes, Hume and Grotius. This book is an attempt to come to terms with his contribution to the subject of international relations.

Order and Violence Summary

Order and Violence: Hedley Bull and International Relations by J. D. B. Miller (Executive Director, Executive Director, The Academy of the Social Sciences in Australia)

Hedley Bull, Montague Burton Professor of International Relations at Oxford from 1977 until his death in 1985, was one of the great scholars of his generation. He wrote within a tradition of political thought which he himself traced back to Hobbes and Hume and to Grotius and the natural lawyers. He not only added to the literature in this tradition, but he also showed how it could become a foundation for the study of International Relations. In this book, leading scholars attempt to come to terms with his contribution to the subject by offering essays on each of the major aspects of his thought. The central political question in International Relations is how order might exist amidst anarchy. This was the question which Hedley Bull took as his starting-point for thought, and he returned to it throughout his career, notably in his major work, The Anarchical Society. The exploration of this question is the central theme in the present volume, and each of the authors take it as a point of departure and examine it from a different point of view - such as society, order, the Third World, strategy, and the contemporary system, and of professing the subject of International Relations. The return to fundamentals involved in this enterprise will make this volume an important and valuable work. The contributors are: J. D. B. Miller, Stanley Hoffman, R. J. Vincent, T. B. Millar, Robert Gilpin Jr., James Richardson, and Carsten Holbraad.

Order and Violence Reviews

'a welcome departure from the conventional festschrift ... which so often obscures the true worth of the recipient ... offers two distinct advantages: an appeal to the professional theorist of international relations and an admirable introduction to the undergraduate keen to explore the nature of international relations via the thought of one of its most distinguished thinkers' Times Higher Education Supplement
'an excellent volume of essays ... The book invites a reading, a rereading and a rethinking about Bull's contribution to international relations. In addition, Don Markwell's comprehensive bibliography of Bull's works provides a valuable reference source.' Ngaire Woods, Oxford International Review 1990
'an informative and revealing account of Bull's background and intellectual development ... a set of enagaging arguments which will become recommended reading and stimulate students and teachers alike' Mark Hoffman, London School of Economics and Political Science, Political Studies, Volume XXXIX Number 1 March 1991
`This is a highly absorbing book on one of the most important scholars of international relations of the post-war period ... stimulating and elegantly produced volume ... it is a most valuable contribution to international relations historiography, and no less importantly, it provides an excellent point of reference for further research on the questions and concerns which Bull did so much to clarify.' Millenium
'Festschrifts far too frequently lapse into hagiolatry. That Order and Violence is not going to succumb to this tendency is evident from the opening pages where J.D.B. Miller presents a frank assessment of Hedley Bull as scholar and colleague. The subsequent essays are equally candid in noting the shortcomings in Bull's work: his tendency to oscillate between rationalist and realist perspectives. There is, of course, much compensating discussion of the strengths of Bull's approach and of the enormous impact that he had on the international relations discipline.' John Ravenhill, Australian National University, Australian Journal of International Affairs, 11/92

Table of Contents

J.D.B. Miller: Hedley Bull 1932-1985; Stanley Hoffman: Hedley Bull and international society; R.J. Vincent: Hedley Bull and order in international politics; J.D.B. Miller: Hedley Bull and the Third World; T.B. Millar: Hedley Bull, strategic studies, and arms control; Robert Gilpin Jr: Hedley Bull and the global political system; James L. Richardson: Hedley Bull and the academic study of international relations; Carsten Holbraad: Conclusions: Hedley Bull and international relations;

Additional information

NPB9780198275558
9780198275558
0198275552
Order and Violence: Hedley Bull and International Relations by J. D. B. Miller (Executive Director, Executive Director, The Academy of the Social Sciences in Australia)
New
Hardback
Oxford University Press
1990-07-26
228
N/A
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