Realism and World Politics

(Nora) #1

48 Teschke, Myth of 1648, p. 2.
49 Barry Buzan and Richard Little ‘Why international relations has failed as an intellectual
project and what to do about it’ Millennium30 (1), 2001, pp. 19–39.
50 Immanuel Wallerstein, Geopolitics and Geoculture: Essays on the Changing World System,
(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1991).
51 William H. McNeill, ‘The changing shape of world history’ in P. Pomper, R.H. Elphick
and R.T. Vann, World History: Ideologies, Structures and Identity (Oxford: Blackwell, 1998).
52 Buzan and Little, International Systems in World History.
53 See Barry Buzan and Richard Little, ‘World history and non-Western IR theory’ in
Amitav Acharya and Barry Buzan, eds, Non-Western International Relations Theory: On and
Beyond Asia(London: Routledge, 2009).
54 See Justin Rosenberg, The Follies of Globalization Theory(London: Versa, 2000) and John
M. Hobson ‘Deconstructing Rosenberg’s “Contribution to the critique of the global
economy”: a review from a non–Eurocentric bridge of the world’, International Politics,
42 (3), 2005, pp. 372–80.
55 Robert W. Cox, ‘Social forces, states and world orders: beyond International Relations
theory’ in Keohane, Neorealism and its Critics, p. 243.
56 See Arthur M. Eckstein, Mediterranean Anarchy, Interstate War, and the Rise of Rome
(Berkeley: University of California Press, 2006) and Rome Enters the Greek East: From
Anarchy to Hierarchy in the Hellenistic Mediterranean, 230–170 BC(Oxford: Blackwell,
2008).
57 Eckstein, Mediterranean Anarchy, p. 10.


The paradox of parsimony 305
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