This volume presents a narrative history of the English School of
International Relations. After E.H. Carr departed from academic
international relations in the late 1940s, Martin Wight became the
most theoretically innovative scholar in the discipline. Wight
found an institutional setting for his ideas in The British
Committee, a group which Herbert Butterfield inaugurated in 1959.
The book argues that this date should be regarded as the origin of
a distinctive English School of International Relations. In
addition to tracing the history of the School, the book argues that
later English School scholars, such as Hedley Bull and R.J.
Vincent, have made a significant contribution to the new normative
thinking in international relations.
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