Edward Carr is seen to this day one of the most important theoreticians of the study of international relations. Despite the fact that his work has been written before the start of the Second World War, he was among the first scholars and analysts to take into account the theory of international relations as a paradigm and afterwards as a science.
One of his most important works in this area and perhaps the one that provided the backbone of the research conducted in international relations in modern times is Carr's "The Twenty Years' Crisis" first published in 1939 with a second issue in 1946. The subject of the book cannot be presented as a chapter-by-chapter presentation especially given the nature of the work that includes a significant role of analysis and interpretation. More precisely, the book in itself represents the first and most eloquent attempt to argue on the role of politics and utopian belief in the period between the two world wars and how this utopian approach eventually contributed significantly to the outbreak of the Second World War.
In order to consider the full contribution Carr had to the study of international...
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