Brian Rathbun argues against the prevailing wisdom on morality in
international relations, both the commonly held belief that foreign
affairs is an amoral realm and the opposing concept that norms have
gradually civilized an unethical world. By focusing on how states
respond to being wronged rather than when they do right, Rathbun shows
that morality is and always has been virtually everywhere in
international relations - in the perception of threat, the persistence
of conflict, the judgment of domestic audiences, and the articulation of
expansionist goals. The inescapability of our moral impulses owes to
their evolutionary origins in helping individuals solve recurrent
problems in their anarchic environment. Through archival case studies of
German foreign policy; the analysis of enormous corpora of text; and
surveys of Russian, Chinese, and American publics, this book reorients
how we think about the role of morality in international relations.