A

Political Theories of

From to the Present

DAVID BOUCHER

Oxford University Press 1998 DETAILED CONTENTS

INTRODUCTION

1. The Character of the Political Theory of International Relations 3 International Relations Theory and the Political Theory of International Relations 4 The Classic Texts in the Political Theory of International Relations 11 Modern Characterizations 13 2. The Three Traditions: Empirical Realism, Universal Moral Order, and Historical Reason 28 Empirical Realism 29 Universal Moral Order 32 Historical Reason 37

PART I. EMPIRICAL REALISM

3. The Primacy of Interest: Classical Greece 47 The Independent Polis 47 Identity and Difference 50 War and Stasis 54 The New Learning , 56

4. Thucydides' Peloponnesian War 67 Athens and Sparta on the Eve of the War 70 Fear: The Real Reason for War 72 Imperialism and Human Nature 74 The Burden of Empire 76 The Athenian Character 78 The Paradoxical Effects of War 79 The Decline of Athens 82

5. Machiavelli, Human Nature, and the Exemplar of Rome 90 Machiavelli's Method _ 91 Human Nature and Politics 93 x Contents of the Ancients: Macedonia 95 Experience of the Ancients: Rome 98 The Art of War 107

6. The Priority of the Secular: The Medieval Inheritance and Machiavelli's Subordination of Ethics to Politics 114 The Empire, the Church, and State 115 Marsilius of Padua and William of Ockham 119 Political Experience of Machiavelli 125 The Conditions for a Successful State 131 Reason of State 136

7. Inter-Community and International Relations in the of Hobbes Interpretations of Hobbes Interpreters of Hobbes's International Relations Theory Hypothetical State of Nature The Historical State of Nature Relations among Commonwealths

PART II. UNIVERSAL MORAL ORDER

8. The Priority of Law and Morality: The Greeks and Stoics The Greeks _/ The Greek and Roman Stoics Cicero Marcus Aurelius The Christian World-View

9. Constraining the Causes and Conduct of War: Aquinas, Vitoria, Gentili, and Grotius The Medieval Mind St Thomas Aquinas European Expansionism: Vitoria and Gentili The New World Natural Rights and the Rule of Law: Grotius Justice and Injustice Jus naturale and jus gentium Community of the World Contents xi Theory of Property and the American Indians 217

10. Pufendorfand the Person of the State 223 A Science of Morals 225 The State of Nature 227 Inconveniences of the State of Nature 232 Establishing States 234 Personifying the State 236 States and the State of Nature 238 The Morality of War and Peace 240 The Sovereign's Right to Make Peace 243 Rites of Passage 247 and Property Rights 249

11. International and Cosmopolitan Societies: Locke, Vattel, and Kant 255 Property and Colonization: John Locke and Emer Vattel 255 Just War: Locke and Vattel 259 The Equality of Nations 261 Vattel on Natural Law and the Law of Nations 262 The Right of War 266 Kant's 268 Natural Law, Natural Rights, and the Categorical Imperative 270 No Right to Go to War 277

PART III. HISTORICAL REASON

12. Redemption through Independence: Rousseau's Theory of International Relations ^ 289 The Emerging System of States 289 Rousseau's Ambiguity 291 State of Nature L 292 Criticisms of Hobbes 293 The Denial of Natural Law 296 Rousseau and Historical Reason 298 The State as the Political Unit in International Relations 299 The Solution 302

13. and Historical Reason in International Relations 308 Colonialism . 309 xii Contents Burke's Realism 311 Burke as a Universal Moralist 314 Historical Reason 317 The European Balance 319

14. Hegel's Theory of International Relations 330 The Actual is the Rational 331 The Philosophical Project 333 Realism and Universal Moralism 335 Historical Reason 340 Individuality of States 341 International Obligations 344 The Justification of War 347

15. Marx and the Capitalist World System 354 The Changing International Scene 354 Marx and Hegel 355 From Nationalism to Materialism 357 The Three Traditions 358 Capitalism and the World 362 Colonialism 366

16. Identity, Human Rights, and the Extension of the Moral Community: The Political Theory of International Relations in the Twentieth Century Human Rights, Man's Wrongs, and the Feminist Voice National Identity Extending the Moral Community: Justice beyond Borders

Bibliography Index