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Foreword; Acknowledgments; Contents; Part IOn Kalevi Holsti; 1 Biography; 1.1 My Father's Career as a Finnish Diplomat; 1.2 Experience as a High School and University Student; 1.3 Start of My Academic Career in International Relations; 1.4 My First Books on International Relations; 1.5 Impact of my Stay in Fiji on Foreign Policy Analysis; 1.6 My Concern with War and its Analysis; 1.7 Research, Writing, and Rewards; 2 Bibliography; 2.1 Books; 2.2 Chapters in Edited Books; 2.3 Journal Articles; Part IITexts by Kalevi Holsti on InternationalTheory; 3 Introduction on International Theory.

4 Hegemony and Challenge in International Theory4.1 Consequences of Theoretical Profusion: Dialogue or Confusion?; 4.2 Guidelines to Inquiry in the Classical Tradition; 4.3 The Hegemony of the Classical Tradition; 4.4 A National Academic Hegemony; 5 The Problem of Change in International Relations Theory; 5.1 Markers of Change; 5.1.1 Trends; 5.1.2 Great Events; 5.1.3 Great Achievements; 5.1.4 Significant Social/Technological Innovations; 5.2 Concepts of Change; 5.2.1 Change as Addition; 5.2.2 Dialectical Change; 5.2.3 Change as Transformation; 5.2.4 Change as Replacement.

5.2.5 Systemic and Lower Levels of Change5.3 A Source of Confusion: Defining International Relations; 5.4 Change and International Institutions; 5.5 Possibilities of Institutional Change; 6 Along the Road of International Theory in the Next Millennium: Four Travelogues; 6.1 A Crisis in International Theory?; 6.1.1 Promises and Pitfalls of Postmodernism; 6.1.2 Isomorphism; 6.1.3 Lack of a Core Problem; 6.1.4 The Problem of International Politics Is Solved; 6.2 Constructing Travelogues; 6.2.1 Oblivion; 6.2.2 Uncivil War; 6.2.3 A New Consensus.

6.3 The Fourth Travelogue: One Thousand Blooming Flowers6.4 Conclusion; References; 7 Hindrances to Understanding in International Relations; 7.1 Introduction; 7.2 On Understanding; 7.3 Institutional Hindrances to Understanding; 7.4 Disagreement and Misunderstanding; 7.5 The Processes of Theoretical Innovation; 7.6 From Problem Identification and Choice to Diagnosis; 7.7 From Diagnosis to Prescription; 7.8 More Sources of Misunderstanding: Defining the Field; 7.8.1 The Search for a Grand Theory; 7.8.2 International Politics and International Relations: Distinctions.

7.9 Different Motivations, Different Understandings7.10 Solutions?; References; Part IIITexts by Kalevi Holsti on ForeignPolicy Analysis; 8 Introduction on Foreign Policy Change; 9 Restructuring Foreign Policy: A Neglected Phenomenon in Foreign Policy Theory; 9.1 A Typology of Foreign Policy Restructuring; 9.2 Prelude to Foreign Policy Restructuring: Disengagement; 9.3 International Relations Theory and Foreign Policy Restructuring; 9.4 Describing and Explaining Foreign Policy Reorientation and Restructuring: A Framework; 9.5 Organizing the Data.

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