Notes 1 A Profile 1 . What is interesting to note is that when I mentioned this to his son, his reaction revealed some of KWT’s character: “I cannot imagine my father as a lawyer; a law professor yes, but not a lawyer” (author’s interview, Paul A. Thompson, April 7, 2012, Charlottesville, VA). 2 . Sometimes “he would connect through a third party,” his son told me. The moment he felt one would benefit from a conversation or meeting someone, he would facilitate it. His son related that when Father Theodore Martin Hesburgh (1917– ) delivered a lecture in St. Olaf, KWT recommended that Hesburgh meet with a particular faculty member. Only after the two met did they realize how important it was for them to get to know each another. 3 . In the vernacular of the University of Virginia, the titles of all faculty mem- bers is Mr. or Ms., because Thomas Jefferson founded the university and his most significant title as the president was Mr. 3 Exercising Practice 1 . John D. Rockefeller, Sr., created a charity in the memory of his wife Laura Spelman in October 1918. Part of its mandate was support for research in the social sciences. It was rather active and served as the seed of the Division of Social Sciences in the RF. 5 Practicing Education 1 . The agencies were as follows: Canadian International Development Agency (CIDA); Ford Foundation; French Ministry of Foreign Affairs; Inter-American Development Bank; International Bank for Reconstruction and Development; International Development Research Centre (IDRC); United Kingdom Ministry of Overseas Development; Rockefeller Foundation; United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF); United Nation Development Program (UNDP); United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization (UNESCO); and US Agency for International Development. 184 ● Notes 6 Politics and International Relations 1 . I think KWT has paraphrased this saying by James Madison (1751–1836) in the Federalist No. 51: “If men were angels, no government would be nec- essary.” He has completed the paradoxical reality about the dual nature of human beings by adding: “if men were wholly good, government would be unnecessary” (B1962: 19). 7 Practicing Statecraft 1 . This passage was published in 1980. Since then the United States has signed some of the conventions. For example, President Reagan signed the “Genocide Convention” on November 11, 1988, and later on December 9 the treaty was ratified. Bibliography KWT’s Books 1951 Principles and Problems of International Politics: Selected Readings. Coedited with Hans J. Morgenthau. New York: Alfred A. Knopf. 1953 Man and Modern Society: Conflict and Choice in the Industrial Era. Written with Karl de Schweinitz, Jr. New York: Henry Holt. 1957 Ethics and National Purpose. New York: Council on Religion and International Affairs, 2nd printing 1959 and third printing 1964. 1959 Christian Ethics and the Dilemmas of Foreign Policy . Durham: Duke University Press, a. Great Decisions, 1960-U.S. Foreign Policy—Ideals and Realities . Written with Paul H. Nitze. No. 138 of the Foreign Policy Association’s “Headline Series.” New York: Foreign Policy Association, b. 1960 Conflict and Cooperation among Nations . Edited in collaboration with Ivo D. Duchacek. New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, a. Political Realism and the Crisis of World Politics: An American Approach to Foreign Policy . Princeton: Princeton University Press, b. 1962 American Diplomacy and Emergent Patterns . New York: New York University Press. 1963 Foreign Policies in a World of Change . Edited with Joseph E. Black. New York: Harper & Row, a. Religion and International Relations . Council of Christian Social Action, United Church of Christ, b. 186 ● Bibliography 1966 The Moral Issue in Statecraft; Twentieth-Century Approaches and Problems . Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press. 1968 U.S. Policy in the Far East: Ideology, Religion and Superstition. Written with Hans J. Morgenthau and Jerald C. Brauer. New York: Council on Religion and International Affairs. 1972 Foreign Assistance: A View from the Private Sector. Notre Dame: University of Notre Dame Press. 1973 Reconstituting the Human Community; A Report of Colloquium III, Held at Bellagio, Italy, July 17–23, 1972 for the Program of Inquiries, Cultural Relations for the Future. Edited with Paul J. Braisted and Soedjatmoko. New Haven: Hazen Foundation. 1975 Understanding World Politics . Notre Dame: University of Notre Dame Press. 1976 Higher Education and Social Change: Promising Experiments in Developing Countries, Vol. 2: Case Studies . Edited with Barbara R. Fogel and Helen E. Danner. New York: Praeger, a. Higher Education and Social Change: Promising Experiments in Developing Countries , Vol. 1: Reports . Written with Barbara R. Fogel. New York: Praeger, b. Foreign Policy in World Politics . Written with Roy Macridis and others. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall, c. World Politics: An Introduction . Written with James N. Rosenau and Gavin Boyd. New York: Free Press, d. 1978 Foreign Policy and the Democratic Process: The Geneva Papers. Edited with Louis J. Halle. Lanham: University Press of America, a. Interpreters and Critics of the Cold War . Lanham: University Press of America, b. 1979 Ethics, Functionalism and Power in International Politics: Crisis in Values . Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, a. Foreign Policy and Morality: Framework for a Moral Audit . New York: Council on Religion and International Affairs, b. 1980 Herbert Butterfield: The Ethics of History and Politics . Washington, DC: University Press of America, a. Masters of International Thought: Major Twentieth Century Theorists and the World Crisis . Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, b. Bibliography ● 187 Morality and Foreign Policy . Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, c. The Moral Imperatives of Human Rights . Edited. Lanham: University Press of America, d. 1981 Cold War Theories . Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, a. The President and the Public Philosophy. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, b. 1983 Essays on Lincoln’s Faith and Politics. Edited by Hans J. Morgenthau and David Hein. Lanham University Press of America, a Winston Churchill’s World View: Statesmanship and Power . Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, b. 1984 Moral Dimensions of American Foreign Policy . Published for Council on Religion and International Affairs. New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Books. 1985 Ethics and International Relations: Ethics in Foreign Policy . New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Books, a. The Media. Vol. 5 of the series The Credibility of Institutions, Policies and Leadership . Lanham: University Press of America, b. Moralism and Morality in Politics and Diplomacy . Vol. 1 of the series The Credibility of Institutions, Policies and Leadership . Lanham: University Press of America, c. Politics among Nations; the Struggle for Power and Peace . Written with Hans J. Morgenthau, Sixth edition. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1985, d. Toynbee’s Philosophy of World History and Politics . Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, e. 1987 Moral and Political Discourse; Theory and Practice in International Relations . Lanham: University Press of America. 1992 Traditions and Values in Politics and Diplomacy: Theory and Practice. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press. 1994 Culture, Development, and Democracy: The role of the Intellectual. A Tribute to Soedjatmoko. Edited with Selo Soemardjan. Tokyo: United Nations University Press, a. Father of International Thought: The Legacy of Political Theory. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, b. 1995 Diplomacy, Administration, and Policy: The Ideas and Careers of Fredrick E. Nolting, Jr., Fredrick C. Mosher, and Paul T. David. Edited by KWT. Lanham: University Press of America. 188 ● Bibliography 1996 Schools of Thought in International Relations: Interpreters, Issues, and Morality. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press. Articles, Chapters, and Essays 1952 “The Study of International Politics: A Survey of Trends and Developments,” Review of Politics , 14 (October), 433–467. 1953 “Collective Security Re-examined,” American Political Science Review , 47 (September), 753–772. 1955 “Beyond National Interest: A Critical Evaluation of Reinhold Niebuhr’s Theory of International Politics,” Review of Politics, 17 (April), 167–188¸ a. “Geneva: Triumph and Tragedy,” Christianity & Crisis, 15 (October 3), 123–127. “Prophets and Politics,” Christianity & Crisis, 15 (May 16), 59–62, b. “Toward a Theory of International Politics,” American Political Science Review, 49 (September), 733–746, 7c. “Toynbee’s Approach to History Reviewed,” Ethics, 65 (July), 287–303, d. 1956 “Colonialism: An American Dilemma,” Christianity & Crisis, 16 (April 16), 41–42, a. “Ethics and Foreign Policy,” World Alliance News Letter, 32 (October), 4–5 and 7, b. “From Popular to Personal Diplomacy,” Christianity & Crisis, 16 (July 23), 97–99, c. “Reflections on the Present Functions of Political Ethics,” World Alliance News Letter, 32 (November), 1, 3, c. “The Political Philosophy of Reinhold Niebuhr,” in Reinhold Niebuhr, His Religious, Social and Political Thought . Edited by Charles W. Kegley and Robert W. Bretall. New York: Macmillan, 152–175, d. “The Real Issues in Our Foreign Affairs,” Intercollegian, 73 (May), 8–13, e. “Toynbee and the Theory of International Politics,” Political Science Quarterly , 71 (September), 365–386, f. “Toynbee and World Politics: Democracy and Foreign Policy,” Review of Politics, 18 (October),
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