John S Dryzek, Bonnie Honig, and Anne Philips: Introduction
I. CONTEMPORARY CURRENTS
1: Richard Arneson: Justice After Rawls
2: Wendy Brown: Power After Foucault
3: William E Scheuerman: Critical Theory Beyond Habermas
4: Linda Zerilli: Feminist Theory and the Canon of Political
Thought
5: Paul Patton: After the Linguistic Turn: Poststructuralist and
Liberal Pragmatist Political Theory
6: David Schlosberg: The Pluralist Imagination
II. THE LEGACY OF THE PAST
7: J G A Pocock: Theory in History: Problems of Context and
Narrative
8: Jill Frank: The Political Theory of Classical Greece
9: Eric Nelson: Republican Visions
10: Jane Bennett: Modernity and its Critics
11: James Farr: The History of Political Thought, as Disciplinary
Genre
III. POLITICAL THEORY IN THE WORLD
12: Richarad Bellamy: The Challenge of European Union
13: Daniel A Bell: East Asia and the West: The Impact of
Confucianism on Anglo-American Political Thought
14: Ronald J Schmidt Jr: In the Beginning all the World was
America: American Exceptionalism in New Contexts
15: Roxanne L Euben: Changing Interpretations of Modern and
Contemporary Islamic Political Theory
IV. STATE AND PEOPLE
16: Shannon Stimson: Constitutionalism and the Rule of Law
17: John Ferejohn and Pasquale Pasquino: Emergency Powers
18: Margaret Canovan: The People
19: Simone Chambers and Jeffrey Kopstein: Civil Society and
State
20: Mark E Warren: Democracy and the State
21: Michael Saward: Democracy and Citizenship: Expanding
Domains
V. JUSTICE, EQUALITY, AND FREEDOM
22: Susan Mendus: Impartiality
23: Serena Olsaretti: Justice, Luck, and Desert
24: Patchen Markell: Recognition and Redistribution
25: Judith Squires: Equality and Difference
26: Andrew Williams: Liberty, Equality, and Property
27: Duncan Ivison: Historical Injustice
VI. PLURALISM, MULTICULTURALISM, AND NATIONALISM
28: David Miller: Nationalism
29: Jeffrey Spinner-Halev: Multiculturalism and its Critics
30: Anna Elisabetta Galeotti: Identity, Difference, Toleration
31: Chandran Kukathas: Moral Universalism and Cultural
Difference
VII. CLAIMS IN A GLOBAL CONTEXT
32: Jack Donnelly: Human Rights
33: Chris Brown: From International to Gloabl Justice?
34: Rajeev Bhargava: Political Secularism
35: Paul Gilroy: Multi-Culturalism and Post-Colonialism
VIII. THE BODY POLITIC
36: Moria Gatens: Politicizing the Body: Property, Contract, and
Rights
37: Beate Roessler: New Ways of Thinking About Privacy
38: Cécile Fabre: New Technologies of the Body
39: James M Glass: Paranoia and Political Philosophy
IX. TESTING THE BOUNDARIES
40: Jodi Dean: Political Theory and Cultural Studies
41: John M Meyer: Political Theory and the Environment
42: Stephen L Elkin: Political Theory and Political Economy
43: Christine Helliwell and Barry Hindess: Political Theory and
Social Theory
X. OLD AND NEW
44: William E Connolly: Then and Now: Participant-Observation in
Political Theory
45: Arlene W Saxonhouse: Exile and Re-Entry: Political Theory
Yesterday and Tomorrow
John S. Dryzek is Professor of Social and Political Theory at Australian National University.
Bonnie Honig is Professor of Political Science at Northwestern University.
Anne Phillips is Professor of Gender Theory at the London School of Economics.
`Review from previous edition 'This is a unique and impressive set
of analyses about scholarship in political theory. It is
comprehensive, as we would expect. Beyond that, it is remarkably
creative in the way that Dryzek, Honig and Phillips have organized
categories, and it includes much overdue reference to scholarship
on non-Western and postcolonial thought.'
'
Iris Marion Young, Late Professor of Political Science at the
University of Chicago.
`'This extraordinary series offers 'state of the art' assessments
that instruct, engage, and provoke. Both synoptic and directive,
the fine essays across these superbly edited volumes reflect the
ambitions and diversity of political science. No one who is
immersed in the discipline's controversies and possibilities should
miss the intellectual stimulation and critical appraisal these
works so powerfully provide.'
'
Ira Katznelson, Ruggles Professor of Political Science and History,
Columbia University
`'Under the general editorship of Robert E. Goodin, a large group
of intellectually attractive authors has charted the entire field
of political science in an unbiased multi-paradigmatic way.
Minerva's owl would make a nice logo for this monumental collective
work of the Oxford Handbooks: what moves us forward is looking back
at what we know.'
'
Claus Offe, Professor of Political Science, Hertie School of
Governance, Berlin and Institute for Social Science, Humboldt
University, Berlin.
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