<p>'<strong>Chris Brown is what many scholars wish to be - a writer whose lucid expositions never fail to engage, challenge, and enlighten. For thoughtful students of international affairs, these essays are an education in the subject at its self-reflective best.</strong>' - <em>Terry Nardin, National University of Singapore</em></p><p><strong>'I urge every student of international relations and political thought to read this book. You will find yourself on an amazing journey through the essential currents of contemporary intellectual history. Chris Brown is an incomparable guide. He shows us his subject in all of its magnificent scope. His clarity, discernment and charming wit carry you lightly through even the heaviest of arguments. It is a rare collection of essays that can re-cast an entire genre of literature. This volume does so. Like all great essayists, Chris Brown gives us ideas, characters and stories that delight and instruct.' - </strong><em>Joel H. Rosenthal, President, Carnegie Council for Ethics in International Affairs</em></p><p><strong>This is an invaluable volume. Each essay is immensely insightful, unfailingly engaging, and boldly provocative. Moreover, the collection as a whole maps the evolution in thinking of an eminently important scholar who has done no less than pioneer the field of study variously known as a ‘international political theory’, ‘normative international relations (IR) theory’ and ‘international ethics.’ - </strong><em>Toni Erskine, Aberystwyth University</em> </p>
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Chris Brown is Professor of International Relations at the London School of Economics and Political Science and a former Chair of the British International Studies Association. He is the author of Understanding International Relations (4th ed. 2009, with Kirsten Ainley), Sovereignty, Rights and Justice (2002), International Relations Theory: New Normative Approaches (1992), editor of Political Restructuring in Europe: Ethical Perspectives (1994) and co-editor of International Relations in Political Thought: Texts from the Ancient Greeks to the First World War (2002).