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Index






 

9/11 232

1856 declaration (Islahat Fermanι) 118, 123


Abdülmecid II 34

acceptance, stigmatization 96

Afghanistan 134 agrarian empires

modernity transition 38, 42–4

stigmatization 61

AKP (Justice and Development Party) (Turkey) 246

Alexander II, Emperor of Russia 208 animalistic behavior 70

Ankara Assembly 127, 129

anomie 66, 71

Aras, Tevfik Rüştü 135, 140

argument outline 12

Aristotle 69, 241

armed forces 151

arriviste strategy 106–8

assimilation 22, 247–8

Atatürk, Mustafa Kemal 36, 112, 113,

127–9, 142–3, 145–8, 153, 155

Atay, Falih Rιfkι 146 atrocities 198

authenticity 94

autonomy 67


Badgley, John H. 188 Balkans 135

Bauman, Zygmunt 55, 98, 242, 243,

247

Befu, Harumi 193

Berlin, Isaiah 67, 72

Billington, James 208

Bolsheviks 36, 210–12, 213, 216

Bourdieu, Pierre 100

Brines, Russell 175

Britain 48

 

empire 86, 112

Turkey relations 141 views on Turkey 139

Brown, Charlie 248

Bukovansky, Mlada 45

Bull, Hedley 62

Burke, Edmund 74

Buruma, Ian 160, 161, 176

Buzan, Barry 23


Caliphate 126, 129, 133, 144, 146

capitalism 41 Carr, E. H. 46

case studies, use of 23, 25 Cecil, Lord Robert 111 Chaadaev, Peter 208

chapter outlines 13–26

Chechnya 232

China 162, 167

Japanese war against 167, 168–70

Christians 117, 120

citizenship 80–2

civilization standard 53, 83–7, 93

Japan 161–6

Ottoman Empire 119

Turkey 143–8

Clark, Ian 90, 93

closure 52

Cold War 197, 215, 217, 224

collective narratives 4

Committee of Union and Progress (CUP) (Turkey) 35, 124

Concert of Europe 205 constitutions 177

constructivism 14–16, 17

“correction,” stigmatization 97, 105

Crimean War 207

critical realism 25

CUP (Committee of Union and Progress) (Turkey) 35, 124

 



286

 

defeat, state responses to 105 defense expenditure 190

democratic governance 91–5 Democratic Party of Japan (DJP) 246 Derluguian, Georgi 29, 214, 217

Deudney, Daniel 218

development theory 90–1, 92

dichotomies 5, 6, 48, 87, 242

discrimination 95

DJP (Democratic Party of Japan) 246

Dodge, Joseph 179

dominant groups 83

dress codes 60

Dulles, John Foster 179


East/West dichotomy 5, 6, 48, 87

economic development 87–91

educated classes 55

egalitarianism 78

Elias, Norbert 10, 52, 57, 101, 102

elites 32, 54–6, 165 emancipation of serfs 208 empiricism 25

emulation 19, 39

English, Robert 207

equal recognition 72–82, 83

see also recognition relationships equality 74, 83

Esat, Mahmut 144

established-outsider dynamic 10, 21,

39, 58–62, 82–95, 192, 243

Europe 138–40, 204

exclusion, collectivist criteria 52, 83


foreign policy 63, 221–35, 246 Foreign Policy Concept (1993)

(Russia) 225, 227

Foreign Policy Concept (2000) (Russia) 231

foreigners 81

formal equality 83

freedom 67, 70, 72–82, 254

French Revolution 44, 46

Fukuyama, Francis 90


G-7 229

G-8 231

Galtung, Johan 193

Gellner, Ernest 41, 45, 50, 218

 

Germans, The (Elias) 101, 102

Germany 52, 76, 199

Giddens, Anthony 45, 62

Gilman, Sander 79

global hierarchies 92

Goffman, Erving 3, 8, 11, 59, 63, 95,

123, 154, 249

Goldstone, Jack 25

Gong, Gerrit 23, 39

Gorbachev, Mikhail 218–20

governance 91–5

great powers 64, 199

Greece 84, 97

Turkey relations 135 Turkish Independence War

129

Greenfeld, Liah 78 Grew, Joseph C. 129 Grotius, Hugo 48

group narratives 4

Group of Eight (G-8) 231 Group of Seven (G-7) 229 gunpowder empires see agrarian

empires


habitus concept 100–2, 104

Halis, Keriman 158

hat law 147, 151

Hatoyama Ichiro 184 Hayes, Louis D. 183 headscarves 156

Hegel, Georg Wilhelm Friedrich 67, 68, 71, 72, 74, 254

Herriot, M. E. 114 hierarchies 51, 67, 92

Himba tribe 60

Hobbes, Thomas 74 Hobson, John M. 48 Huntington, Samuel 90


Ikeda Hayato 186, 187 Ikenberry, John G. 218 Imperial Japan 166–74

imperialism 47, 49

individual, the 73

industrialization 45, 88

inferiority 69

Inoguchi, Takashi 183

insider–outsider status 29–56

internalization, stigmatization 96

 

international hierarchies 92 international relations theories 241 international system 17, 250, 252–3

common ground 21 established-outsider dynamic

58–62, 82–95, 192

insider–outsider status 29–56

Japan 181–3, 193–200, 251

modern states system emergence 46–9

modernity 6–8, 38–45

Russia 251

sociological frameworks 19

Soviet Union 219

stigmatization 63–82

Turkey 149–50, 251

Iran 134

Islahat Fermanι 118, 123

Israel 65


Jackson, Patrick Thaddeus 25 Japan 130, 244

1945–1974 160–200

American occupation 194

American traders 162

anti-American riots 185

Asia strategy 196

attitudes to Asia 164, 182–3

China relations 189

civilization standard 161–6

constitution 177

defeat 175–83, 193, 197

defense expenditure 190

economic policies 177, 187–8

elites 56, 165

foreign policy 183, 188, 189,

246, 250

“frustrated great power” 199 Germany comparison 199

imperialism 166–74, 192

insider–outsider status 29–30

in the international system 181–3, 193–200, 251

leftists 178

Meiji Restoration 161–6

militarism 35, 166–74, 192

national habitus 102

nationalism 200

peace treaty 180

post-defeat dynamic 247

 

recognition strategy 248

reforms 34, 163

response to World War II defeat 175–83

Russia comparison 224

security treaty 180, 185

socialization of 30–8

status enhancement 191–200, 248

stigmatization of 9–12, 170–2, 183,

189, 199

trade 164, 187

Turkey comparisons 174–5, 196

United Nations 184

US occupation 194

US partnership 186

war against China 167, 168–70 war against Russia 167

war crimes 198

Westernization 163

Jews, German emancipation of 76 Justice and Development Party (AKP)

(Turkey) 246


Kafka, Franz 27, 109

Karahan, Comrade 137

Keene, Edward 48

Kemal, Mustafa see Atatürk Kemalist Republic 33

Kenkichi, Odera 170

Kishi Nobusuke 185

Kojève, Alexandre 70, 254

Korea 167, 169

Kuchuk Kainardji, Treaty of 116, 120

Kunio, Yanagida 171


Lausanne Conference 130–2

LDP (Liberal Democrat Party) (Japan) 184

League of Nations 86, 140–1

Lebow, Richard Ned 22, 75, 88 legitimation of the state 77 Leninism 217

Liberal Democrat Party (LDP) (Japan) 184

Loti, Pierre 163

Lynch, Allen 229


MacArthur, Douglas 175, 178, 179

McNeill, William 1

Manchuria 169

 

Mann, Michael 49

Markell, Patchen 68, 72, 76

Marxism 88, 91, 211, 217

Masaru, Nakayama 172

master–slave relationship 68–71, 77

Matsuda, Takeshi 181 mediocre man, the 79

Meiji Restoration 34, 161–6

Metternich, Prince 118

military spending 190

Miss Universe competition 158 Mitchell, Tim 50

modern states system 46–9 modernity 5, 10, 22

economic development 87–91 and the international system 6–8,

38–45

outsider status 49–53

social stratification 49–53

modernization theory 90–1

Mongols 215–16


nation states see states national identity 100–2, 103

Japan 102

Russia 102, 220

stigmatization 3–5

Turkey 1–5

National Security Concept (1997) (Russia) 227

nationalism 50, 77, 200, 222

negative freedom 74

neorealism 31 Nettl, J. P. 89

Neumann, Iver B. 203, 204, 213, 235 New Order in the East Proclamation

172

New Thinking, Soviet reforms 218–20, 225

Nicholas I, Emperor of Russia 206–7 Nietzsche, Friedrich 78–9

normalcy, stigmatization 96

“normals” 241

normative dichotomies 242

normative frameworks 94

norms 16, 82, 94, 239, 242


ontological security 62

Oriental Christendom 120

Orientalism 193, 215

 

Ottoman Empire 33, 61, 111, 204,

244

Christian groups within 117 civilization standard 119

collapse of 123–5

Committee of Union and Progress 35, 124

declinist historical tradition 121 elites 56

historical phases 121

Japan comparison 174–5

reforms 34

Russia comparison 210

“Sick Man of Europe” label 119, 122

stigmatization of 115–25

Westernization 44, 120, 121

outsider states 49–53, 57–108, 253


pacifism 200

Pamuk, Orhan 1, 2, 5, 6, 255

Pan-Turkism 124

Pasha, İsmet 130

“passing,” stigmatization 96–7, 105

peripheral regions 94

persuasion 16

Peter the Great 203 Plato 75

Polevoi, Nikolai 205

popular sovereignty 44

positive freedom 67, 70, 72–82, 254

power differentials 58

priestly strategy 104, 107

Putin, Vladimir 221, 228, 230–5


racism 48, 170

recognition relationships 67–71,

72–82, 83, 217, 248, 254

reform strategies 34–5

rejection strategy, stigmatization 171 research approach 24–5

ressentiment strategy 78, 104, 106–8

revolutions 210

Rhodes, Cecil 47

Robertson, Roland 89

Ruggie, John Gerard 13, 19, 31, 40 Russia

1990–2007 201–39

anti-Western policies 229

authoritarianism 234, 238

 

Russia (cont.) Bolshevism 36

elites 56

energy exports 234

Eurasian identity 233, 236

foreign policy 221–35

insider–outsider status 29–30 in the international system 251 Japan comparison 224

moderate conservatives 222

moderate liberals 221

national habitus 102

national identity 220

National Security Concept 227 nationalism 222

norms 239

Ottoman Empire comparison 210 Ottoman Empire relations 116 post-defeat dynamic 244–6

post-Napoleonic Wars 205

pro-Western groups 221, 225–6

pro-Western policies 232

recognition quest 238

reforms 34, 208, 209

revolution 210

socialization of 30–8

state identity 223

status restoration 235–9

stigmatization of 9–12, 223

Turkey comparison 211–12, 224

US relations 234

war against Japan 167 and the West 236–9 Westernization 203 see also Soviet Union


Sadabad Pact 134

Saint-Exupéry, Antoine de 111

SCAP see Supreme Commander of the Allied Powers

Scheler, Max 106

scientific method 50

secularism 157

self-sovereignty 73

serfs, emancipation of 208 shame 52, 59–60, 95 Sharman, J. C. 48

Sher’ia law 118

“Sick Man of Europe” label 119, 122 slave morality 78

 

see also master–slave relationship Slavophiles 207

social exclusion 67

social hierarchies 67

social inequalities 254

social stratification 49–53, 252

socialization 14–16, 19, 22–3,

30–8

society, perspectives of 20

“sour grapes” strategy, stigmatization 171

sovereignty 44, 49, 70, 73, 254

Soviet Union 87, 91, 98, 153, 213–18

collapse of 220

economic policies 214

economic stagnation 218

equal recognition demands 217 in the international system 219 Japan relations 178

reforms 218–20

stigmatization of 213, 215–16

Turkey relations 137–8

Stalinism 91, 214 Standard of Civilization

see civilization standard states

formation of 102

habitus concept 100–2, 104

identity attributes 63, 65, 103

as outsiders 49–53, 57–108, 253

personification of 100 responses to defeat 105

stigmatization responses 95–108

strategy selection 102–8

status standards 191–200

stigmatization 7, 241, 243, 249, 253

acceptance 96

agrarian empires 61

“correction” 97, 105

embracing of 98

existential dilemmas 95

historical timing 99

internalization 96

in the international system 63–82

Japan 9–12, 170–2, 183, 189, 199

modern state emergence 71–82 and national identity 3–5 normalcy 96

Ottoman Empire 115–25

 

“passing” 96–7, 105

Russia 9–12, 223

Soviet Union 213, 215–16

state strategies 95–108

timing of 99

Turkey 7–12, 150, 156

stratification 49–53, 252 Suleiman the Magnificent 116 Suphi, Hamdullah 144

Supreme Commander of the Allied Powers (SCAP) 176, 178

Suzuki, Shogo 164, 166, 199, 200


Tanaka, Stefan 165

Tanzimat Declaration 34, 117

terrorism 94

Thirty Years War 40 Tocqueville, Alexis de 74 tourism 94

Toynbee, Arnold 84, 120, 155, 240

toyo (Eastern culture) 165

Treaty of Kuchuk Kainardji 116, 120

Tsygankov, Andrei 201

Turkey 244

1918–1938 111–59

army modernization 151

Balkan relations 135

civilization standard 143–8 Eastern state relations 132–5 European views on 138–40

foreign policy 246, 250

Independence War 125–9

insider–outsider status 29–30

in the international system 149–50, 251

Kemalist regime 33, 211–12

League of Nations 140–1

modernization 141–8

national habitus 102

national identity 1–5

normalcy quest 125–32

post-defeat dynamic 247

recognition strategy 248

religion 146

Republic’s birth 129–32

Russia comparison 211–12, 224

secularism 157

socialization of 30–8, 152

 

sovereignty movements 154

Soviet relations 135–8, 153–4

state identity 156–8

status enhancement 248

stigmatization of 7–12, 84, 150,

156

Westernization 85, 141–8, 153,

155, 156, 240

see also Ottoman Empire Turkish Hearth, The 143

Twenty Years’ Crisis, The (Carr) 47


underdeveloped countries 89–91

United Nations 89, 184

United States 162, 194, 195

universal identity 73

US–Japan Security Treaty 180, 185


Wallerstein, Immanuel Maurice 43, 217

Waltz, Kenneth 58, 63, 64 comments on socialization 213

war crimes 198

Washington Times 228

Weber, Max 51

Wendt, Alexander 17, 31, 64 West, the, Russia relations 228,

236–9

Western Europe 40–5

Western hegemony, social impact of 53–6

Western Question in Greece and Turkey, The (Toynbee) 84

Westernization 10

Japan 163

Ottoman Empire 120, 121

Russia 203

Turkey 141–8, 153, 155, 156, 240

Winston Parva study (Elias and

Scotson) 52, 58–9, 65, 69, 82

Wittfogel, Karl A. 215 World Polity school 5, 17, 23 World War II 172


Yack, Bernard 77

Yeltsin, Boris 226–9

Yoshida Doctrine 184, 194, 195

Yoshida Shigeru 36, 176, 180, 181–3

 

Cambridge Studies in International Relations










105  Ken Booth

Theory of world security

104  Benjamin Miller

States, nations and the great powers

The sources of regional war and peace

103 Beate Jahn (ed.)

Classical theory in international relations

102  Andrew Linklater and Hidemi Suganami The English School of international relations A contemporary reassessment

101 Colin Wight

Agents, structures and international relations

Politics as ontology

100  Michael C. Williams

The realist tradition and the limits of international relations

99 Ivan Arreguín-Toft

How the weak win wars

A theory of asymmetric conflict

98 Michael Barnett and Raymond Duvall

Power in global governance

97 Yale H. Ferguson and Richard W. Mansbach

Remapping global politics

History’s revenge and future shock

96 Christian Reus-Smit

The politics of international law

95 Barry Buzan

From international to world society?

English School theory and the social structure of globalisation

94 K. J. Holsti

Taming the sovereigns

Institutional change in international politics

93 Bruce Cronin

Institutions for the common good

International protection regimes in international security

92 Paul Keal

European conquest and the rights of indigenous peoples

The moral backwardness of international society

 

91  Barry Buzan and Ole Wæver

Regions and powers

The structure of international security

90  A. Claire Cutler

Private power and global authority

Transnational merchant law in the global political economy

89  Patrick M. Morgan

Deterrence now

88  Susan Sell

Private power, public law

The globalization of intellectual property rights

87  Nina Tannenwald

The nuclear taboo

The United States and the non-use of nuclear weapons since 1945

86  Linda Weiss

States in the global economy

Bringing domestic institutions back in

85  Rodney Bruce Hall and Thomas J. Biersteker (eds.)

The emergence of private authority in global governance

84  Heather Rae

State identities and the homogenisation of peoples

83  Maja Zehfuss

Constructivism in international relations

The politics of reality

82  Paul K. Ruth and Todd Allee

The democratic peace and territorial conflict in the twentieth century

81  Neta C. Crawford

Argument and change in world politics

Ethics, decolonization and humanitarian intervention

80  Douglas Lemke

Regions of war and peace

79  Richard Shapcott

Justice, community and dialogue in international relations

78  Phil Steinberg

The social construction of the ocean

77  Christine Sylvester

Feminist international relations

An unfinished journey

76  Kenneth A. Schultz

Democracy and coercive diplomacy

75  David Houghton

US foreign policy and the Iran hostage crisis

74  Cecilia Albin

Justice and fairness in international negotiation

73  Martin Shaw

Theory of the global state

Globality as an unfinished revolution

 

72  Frank C. Zagare and D. Marc Kilgour

Perfect deterrence

71  Robert O’Brien, Anne Marie Goetz, Jan Aart Scholte and Marc Williams

Contesting global governance

Multilateral economic institutions and global social movements

70  Roland Bleiker

Popular dissent, human agency and global politics

69  Bill McSweeney

Security, identity and interests

A sociology of international relations

68  Molly Cochran

Normative theory in international relations

A pragmatic approach

67  Alexander Wendt

Social theory of international politics

66  Thomas Risse, Stephen C. Ropp and Kathryn Sikkink (eds.)

The power of human rights

International norms and domestic change

65  Daniel W. Drezner

The sanctions paradox

Economic statecraft and international relations

64  Viva Ona Bartkus

The dynamic of secession

63  John A. Vasquez

The power of power politics

From classical realism to neotraditionalism

62  Emanuel Adler and Michael Barnett (eds.)

Security communities

61  Charles Jones

E. H. Carr and international relations

A duty to lie

60  Jeffrey W. Knopf

Domestic society and international cooperation

The impact of protest on US arms control policy

59  Nicholas Greenwood Onuf

The republican legacy in international thought

58  Daniel S. Geller and J. David Singer

Nations at war

A scientific study of international conflict

57  Randall D. Germain

The international organization of credit

States and global finance in the world economy

56  N. Piers Ludlow

Dealing with Britain

The Six and the first UK application to the EEC

55  Andreas Hasenclever, Peter Mayer and Volker Rittberger

Theories of international regimes

 

54  Miranda A. Schreurs and Elizabeth C. Economy (eds.)

The internationalization of environmental protection

53  James N. Rosenau

Along the domestic–foreign frontier

Exploring governance in a turbulent world

52  John M. Hobson

The wealth of states

A comparative sociology of international economic and political change

51  Kalevi J. Holsti

The state, war, and the state of war

50  Christopher Clapham

Africa and the international system

The politics of state survival

49  Susan Strange

The retreat of the state

The diffusion of power in the world economy

48  William I. Robinson

Promoting polyarchy

Globalization, US intervention, and hegemony

47  Roger Spegele

Political realism in international theory

46  Thomas J. Biersteker and Cynthia Weber (eds.)

State sovereignty as social construct

45  Mervyn Frost

Ethics in international relations

A constitutive theory

44  Mark W. Zacher with Brent A. Sutton

Governing global networks

International regimes for transportation and communications

43  Mark Neufeld

The restructuring of international relations theory

42  Thomas Risse-Kappen (ed.)

Bringing transnational relations back in

Non-state actors, domestic structures and international institutions

41  Hayward R. Alker

Rediscoveries and reformulations

Humanistic methodologies for international studies

40  Robert W. Cox with Timothy J. Sinclair

Approaches to world order

39  Jens Bartelson

A genealogy of sovereignty

38  Mark Rupert

Producing hegemony

The politics of mass production and American global power

37  Cynthia Weber

Simulating sovereignty

Intervention, the state and symbolic exchange

 

36  Gary Goertz

Contexts of international politics

35  James L. Richardson

Crisis diplomacy

The Great Powers since the mid-nineteenth century

34  Bradley S. Klein

Strategic studies and world order

The global politics of deterrence

33  T. V. Paul

Asymmetric conflicts

War initiation by weaker powers

32  Christine Sylvester

Feminist theory and international relations in a postmodern era

31  Peter J. Schraeder

US foreign policy toward Africa

Incrementalism, crisis and change

30  Graham Spinardi

From Polaris to Trident

The development of US Fleet Ballistic Missile technology

29  David A. Welch

Justice and the genesis of war

28  Russell J. Leng

Interstate crisis behavior, 1816–1980

Realism versus reciprocity

27  John A. Vasquez

The war puzzle

26 Stephen Gill (ed.)

Gramsci, historical materialism and international relations

25  Mike Bowker and Robin Brown (eds.)

From cold war to collapse

Theory and world politics in the 1980s

24  R. B. J. Walker

Inside/outside

International relations as political theory

23  Edward Reiss

The strategic defense initiative

22  Keith Krause

Arms and the state

Patterns of military production and trade

21  Roger Buckley

US–Japan alliance diplomacy 1945–1990

20  James N. Rosenau and Ernst-Otto Czempiel (eds.)

Governance without government

Order and change in world politics

19  Michael Nicholson

Rationality and the analysis of international conflict

 

18  John Stopford and Susan Strange

Rival states, rival firms

Competition for world market shares

17  Terry Nardin and David R. Mapel (eds.)

Traditions of international ethics

16  Charles F. Doran

Systems in crisis

New imperatives of high politics at century’s end

15  Deon Geldenhuys

Isolated states

A comparative analysis

14  Kalevi J. Holsti

Peace and war

Armed conflicts and international order 1648–1989

13  Saki Dockrill

Britain’s policy for West German rearmament 1950–1955

12  Robert H. Jackson

Quasi-states

Sovereignty, international relations and the third world

11  James Barber and John Barratt

South Africa’s foreign policy

The search for status and security 1945–1988

10  James Mayall

Nationalism and international society

9  William Bloom

Personal identity, national identity and international relations

8  Zeev Maoz

National choices and international processes

7 Ian Clark

The hierarchy of states

Reform and resistance in the international order

6 Hidemi Suganami

The domestic analogy and world order proposals

5 Stephen Gill

American hegemony and the Trilateral Commission

4 Michael C. Pugh

The ANZUS crisis, nuclear visiting and deterrence

3 Michael Nicholson

Formal theories in international relations

2 Friedrich V. Kratochwil

Rules, norms, and decisions

On the conditions of practical and legal reasoning in international relations and domestic affairs

1 Myles L. C. Robertson

Soviet policy towards Japan

An analysis of trends in the 1970s and 1980s


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