as /f Ernst /i B. ting /f Allen /i S.
?A new contribution to the growing shelf of textbooks on international politics. The authors go over a good deal of familiar territory in analyzing the power factors, in arguing that power is a means to an end, and in acknowledging that ideals and moral considerations influence policy decisions, and in considering the role of international law and of international organizations. They suggest a new emphasis, however, on the varying nature of the elite' groups which affect the international relations of any state: such groups include not only officials but those with private' international interests.?-American Political Science Review
"A new contribution to the growing shelf of textbooks on international politics. The authors go over a good deal of familiar territory in analyzing the power factors, in arguing that power is a means to an end, and in acknowledging that ideals and moral considerations influence policy decisions, and in considering the role of international law and of international organizations. They suggest a new emphasis, however, on the varying nature of the elite' groups which affect the international relations of any state: such groups include not only officials but those with private' international interests."-American Political Science Review
"A new contribution to the growing shelf of textbooks on international politics. The authors go over a good deal of familiar territory in analyzing the power factors, in arguing that power is a means to an end, and in acknowledging that ideals and moral considerations influence policy decisions, and in considering the role of international law and of international organizations. They suggest a new emphasis, however, on the varying nature of the 'elite' groups which affect the international relations of any state: such groups include not only officials but those with 'private' international interests." American Political Science Review