Omar Benseridi
Related Authors
Ian Gwinn
Bournemouth University
Wali Balush
Quaid-i-Azam University, Islamabad, Pakistan
Stefano Recchia
Southern Methodist University
Brent Steele
University of Utah
Jonathan Cristol
Bard College
Nicolas Guilhot
European University Institute
Benjamin Lefebvre
Université du Québec à Montréal
Uploads
Drafts by Omar Benseridi
Norman A.Graebner, and Dante Germino for directing this study when it was my
doctoral thesis at the University of Virginia. I also wish to thank my friends and
colleagues for their help and support: Alice Ba, Stephen Calabrese, Andrew Clem,
Desmond Dewsnap, Cary Federman, Daniel Landis, Amy Nagle, Christopher
Sabatini, Thomas Sakats, Ilter Turan, Scott Waalkes, Helga Welsh, and Marshal
Zeringue. I would also like to thank James A. Smith, Jr. for his encouraging
comments on a draft of Chapter 3; Paul W. Schroeder for his remarks on Chapter 5;
J.David Singer, who took time from his busy schedule to discuss Chapter 6 with
me; and Patrick Yott, of the Alderman Library Social Science Data Center at the
University of Virginia, for his assistance, also with Chapter 6. The errors and
infelicities that remain are my own. A special thanks is due Deniz Bingöl, my
research assistant at Koç University, whose hard work and good cheer were
invaluable in the final stages of this project.
I gratefully acknowledge the financial support of the Earhart Foundation, the
Institute for the Study of World Politics, the Miller Center of Public Affairs and
the Woodrow Wilson Department of Government and Foreign Affairs at the
University of Virginia, and the College of Administrative Sciences and Economics
at Koç University.
The discussion of Michael Oakeshott in Chapter 2 was originally published in
“Michael Oakeshott on History, Practice, and Political Theory,” History of Political
Thought, 17 (1996), pp. 591–614. Copyright ©, Imprint Academic, Exeter, United
Kingdom. The Reinhold Niebuhr material in Chapter 3 first appeared in “The Uses
of Tragedy: Reinhold Niebuhr’s Theory of History and International Ethics,” Ethics
and International Affairs, 9 (1995), pp. 171–91. Copyright ©, Carnegie Council on
Ethics and International Affairs, New York. The section in Chapter 4 devoted to
George Kennan was first published in “Historical Learning and the Setting of
Foreign Policy: The Case of George F. Kennan,” Miller Center Journal, 4 (1997), pp.
95–105. Copyright ©, Miller Center of Public Affairs, University of Virginia,
Charlottesville, Virginia. They are reprinted here with permission.
Norman A.Graebner, and Dante Germino for directing this study when it was my
doctoral thesis at the University of Virginia. I also wish to thank my friends and
colleagues for their help and support: Alice Ba, Stephen Calabrese, Andrew Clem,
Desmond Dewsnap, Cary Federman, Daniel Landis, Amy Nagle, Christopher
Sabatini, Thomas Sakats, Ilter Turan, Scott Waalkes, Helga Welsh, and Marshal
Zeringue. I would also like to thank James A. Smith, Jr. for his encouraging
comments on a draft of Chapter 3; Paul W. Schroeder for his remarks on Chapter 5;
J.David Singer, who took time from his busy schedule to discuss Chapter 6 with
me; and Patrick Yott, of the Alderman Library Social Science Data Center at the
University of Virginia, for his assistance, also with Chapter 6. The errors and
infelicities that remain are my own. A special thanks is due Deniz Bingöl, my
research assistant at Koç University, whose hard work and good cheer were
invaluable in the final stages of this project.
I gratefully acknowledge the financial support of the Earhart Foundation, the
Institute for the Study of World Politics, the Miller Center of Public Affairs and
the Woodrow Wilson Department of Government and Foreign Affairs at the
University of Virginia, and the College of Administrative Sciences and Economics
at Koç University.
The discussion of Michael Oakeshott in Chapter 2 was originally published in
“Michael Oakeshott on History, Practice, and Political Theory,” History of Political
Thought, 17 (1996), pp. 591–614. Copyright ©, Imprint Academic, Exeter, United
Kingdom. The Reinhold Niebuhr material in Chapter 3 first appeared in “The Uses
of Tragedy: Reinhold Niebuhr’s Theory of History and International Ethics,” Ethics
and International Affairs, 9 (1995), pp. 171–91. Copyright ©, Carnegie Council on
Ethics and International Affairs, New York. The section in Chapter 4 devoted to
George Kennan was first published in “Historical Learning and the Setting of
Foreign Policy: The Case of George F. Kennan,” Miller Center Journal, 4 (1997), pp.
95–105. Copyright ©, Miller Center of Public Affairs, University of Virginia,
Charlottesville, Virginia. They are reprinted here with permission.