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Cover
Half Title
Title Page
Copyright Page
Contents
Acknowledgments
1 1914 or 1919? The Aetiology of a Disordered World
Internationalism and Political Disorder
2 The Great War and the Political Conditions of Internationalism
3 Setting Out on a Long Irenic Campaign: The Carnegie Endowment for International Peace Prepares the Construction of a Peaceful World Order, 1910-1920
4 Three Visions of Internationalism: European Socialists after the First World War
Between Order and Disorder: The Case of France
5 Historical Dissent and the Contested Peace of 1919 in France
6 Not So Republican after All? The Ambiguous End of the Great War in Alsace-Lorraine, 1918-1919
7 The "Right to Reparations," a Legal Concept in Post-war France
8 The Wilsonians: When the Traditional Order Creates Disorder (1918-1919)
Science, Gender, and Race in a Disordered Post-war World
9 "Building for Peace": American Chemist William Noyes behind Reconciliation Efforts (1919-1924)
10 So That Our Sons Have Not Died in Vain: Calls for Peace from Pacifist and Non-pacifist Mothers after the Great War
11 "No Women of the World Hate War and Seek Peace More Than the Colored Women": Mary Church Terrell's Bid for Racial Justice and Women's Rights in 1919
Contributors
Index.

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