Description
The League of Nations was the first globally recognized inter-governmental body that attempted to organise peace comprehensively. It addressed not only the traditional security areas of military balances and diplomacy, including the peaceful settlement of international disputes, but also aimed at removing the very causes of war by promoting social and economic justice (specifically by addressing the welfare of vulnerable people). In many ways decades ahead of its time, the League broke the mould as a mechanism for 'doing international relations'. New to the Seminar Studies in History Series, it contains valuable primary source material, a Glossary, Bibliography and Who's Who.
New to the Seminar Studies, a valuable introduction to the League of Nations and the birth of "international relations" in the inter-war period.
About the Author
Martyn Housden has written two historical monographs and four other History texts, including Resistance and Conformity in the Third Reich (London: Routledge, 1997) and Hitler: Biography of a Revolutionary (Routledge, 2000). More recently he has produced a number of articles about the League of Nations, for instance: 'What makes our world safe?', Twentieth Century History Review (in press), and 'Fridtjof Nansen and the League of Nations: 1920-22', Twentieth Century History Review 3 (2008).
Book Information
ISBN 9781408228241
Author Martyn Housden
Format Paperback
Page Count 200
Imprint Longman
Publisher Pearson Education Limited
Weight(grams) 358g
Dimensions(mm) 171mm * 240mm * 11mm