Description
Peacemaking and International Order After the First World War provides a comprehensive examination of the diplomatic, political, and social forces that restructured the global system in the aftermath of the Great War. Through the work of Peter Jackson, William Mulligan, and Glenda Sluga, this volume explores how statesmen, intellectuals, and ordinary citizens grappled with the challenge of creating lasting peace.
The authors investigate the Treaty of Versailles, the League of Nations, and related peace settlements, analyzing their successes and failures in establishing a new international order. The book considers multiple perspectives on peacemaking, including the views of victors and vanquished nations, and examines how decisions made during this period influenced twentieth-century geopolitics, economic arrangements, and cultural developments.
Published by Cambridge University Press, this work is essential for understanding how the post-WWI world was constructed and the foundations it laid for subsequent international relations and conflicts.







Reviews
There are no reviews yet.