Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- Chapter 1 Victorian visions of global order: an introduction
- Chapter 2 Free trade and global order: the rise and fall of a Victorian vision
- Chapter 3 The foundations of Victorian international law
- Chapter 4 Boundaries of Victorian international law
- Chapter 5 ‘A legislating empire’: Victorian political theorists, codes of law, and empire
- Chapter 6 The crisis of liberal imperialism
- Chapter 7 ‘Great’ versus ‘small’ nations: size and national greatness in Victorian political thought
- Chapter 8 The Victorian idea of a global state
- Chapter 9 Radicalism and the extra-European world: the case of Karl Marx
- Chapter 10 Radicalism, Gladstone, and the liberal critique of Disraelian ‘imperialism’
- Chapter 11 The ‘left’ and the critique of empire c. 1865–1900: three roots of humanitarian foreign policy
- Chapter 12 Consequentialist cosmopolitanism
- Index
- Ideas in Context
Contents
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 September 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- Chapter 1 Victorian visions of global order: an introduction
- Chapter 2 Free trade and global order: the rise and fall of a Victorian vision
- Chapter 3 The foundations of Victorian international law
- Chapter 4 Boundaries of Victorian international law
- Chapter 5 ‘A legislating empire’: Victorian political theorists, codes of law, and empire
- Chapter 6 The crisis of liberal imperialism
- Chapter 7 ‘Great’ versus ‘small’ nations: size and national greatness in Victorian political thought
- Chapter 8 The Victorian idea of a global state
- Chapter 9 Radicalism and the extra-European world: the case of Karl Marx
- Chapter 10 Radicalism, Gladstone, and the liberal critique of Disraelian ‘imperialism’
- Chapter 11 The ‘left’ and the critique of empire c. 1865–1900: three roots of humanitarian foreign policy
- Chapter 12 Consequentialist cosmopolitanism
- Index
- Ideas in Context
Summary
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Victorian Visions of Global OrderEmpire and International Relations in Nineteenth-Century Political Thought, pp. vii - viiiPublisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2007