Ned Lebow

ARTICLES

“Weber and International Relations,” to appear in Richard Ned Lebow, ed., Max Weber and International Relations.

“WissenschaftlicheWahrheit:Weber and Knowledge,” to appear in Richard Ned Lebow, ed., Max Weber and International Relations.

“Weber and His Successors: Horkheimer and Adorno, Schmitt, and Morgenthau,” co-authored with David Bohmer Lebow, to appear in Richard Ned Lebow, ed., Max Weber and International Relations and Journal of Political Theory (2015).

“Homer,” to appear in Richard Ned Lebow, Peer Schouten and Hidemi Suganami, eds., Return of the Theorists.

“Thucydides,” to appear in Richard Ned Lebow, Peer Schouten and Hidemi Suganami, eds., Return of the Theorists.

“Max Weber,” to appear in Richard Ned Lebow, Peer Schouten and Hidemi Suganami, eds., Return of the Theorists.

“Counterfactuals and Security Studies,” to appear in Security Studies, 2015.

“Reply to My Critics,” to appear in a symposium on Constructing Cause in International Relations, in the Qualitative Research Methods Newsletter of the American Political Science Association (Autumn 2014), pp. 16-19.

“World War I and Science,” BBC Focus, 4 August, 2014.

“Reply to Warner and Mueller,” Symposium on Reich and Lebow, Good-Bye Hegemony!,European Political Science 13 (2014), pp. 386-89. Co-authored with Simon Reich

Karl Deutsch and International Relations,” International Relations (2014), pp. 1-8.

“Identity and the Self” in Michael T. Gibbons ed., Encyclopaedia of Political Thought (New York: Wiley, 2015),

“Thumos, War and Peace” Common Knowledge, 21, no 1 (2015), pp. 50-82.

“International Relations and Identity,” to appear in Ken Booth and Toni Erskine, eds., International Relations Theory Today (London: Polity, forthcoming).

“Preface” to Jean-Marc Coicaud, ed., On Emotions and Passions in International Politics:Beyond Mainstream International Relations(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2014).

“The Symbolic and Emotional Frames of the Outbreak of World War I,” co-authored with Thomas Lindemann, International Relations, 28, no. 2 (2014), pp. 239-44.

“What Have We Learned from World War I?,” International Relations, 28, no. 2 (2014), pp. 245-50.

“World War I: Recent Historical Scholarship and IR Theory?,” To appear in International Relations, December 2014.

“Restoring Order: The Ancient Greeks on Taming Honor and Appetite,” to appear in Laurie M. Johnson and Daniel Demetriou, eds., Perspectives on Modern Honor (Lanham, Md.: Lexington Books, 2015).

“Tocqueville and the Democratic Peace,” forthcoming in a Festschrift for Nicholas Onuf.

“Trust in International Relations,” to appear in a Festschrift for Lawrence Freedman edited by Benedict Wilkinson (London and Oxford: Hurst and Oxford University Press).

“European Voices in IR Theory: A Transatlantic Perspective,” in European Review of International Studies 1, no. 1 (2014), pp. 65-69.

“Identity,” in Felix Berenskoetter, ed., Concepts of World Politics (London: Sage, 2014).