THREE NEW BOOKS
AN INTRODUCTION TO THE STUDY
OF INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS.
A Series of Essays. Crown 8vo. 2s. net.
CONTENTS. —I, War and Peace since 1815. By A. J. Grant, M.A,,
Professor of History in the University of Leeds,—II. The Causes of
Modern Wars, By F. F. Urquhart, M.A., Fellow and Tutor of Balliol
College, Oxford, —I1I. International Economic Relations, By Arthur
Greenwood. —IV, International Law. By J. D. I. Hughes, B.A., B.C.L.
—V. Political Relations between Advanced and Backward Peoples, By
P. H. Kerr, M.A., Editor of The Round Table.—VI. International Rela-
tions and the Growth of Freedom, By Arthur Greenwood.— Appendix :
Note on Cosmopolitan Associations, By A. G.
THE EMPIRE AND THE FUTURE. A
Qeries of Lectures delivered at King’s College, London.
Crown Svo.
CONTENTS.—The People and the Duties of Empire. By A. IL
Smith, M.A., Dean of Balliol College, Oxford.—Empire and Democracy,
By Sir Charles Lucas.—The Duty of the Empire to the World, By Dr.
George R. Parkin, C.M.G.—Imperial Administration. By H. A. L. Fisher,
M.A., Vice-Chancellor of the University of Sheflield. — Commonwealth
and Empire, By Philip H. Kerr, M.A., Editor of The Round Table.
THE WAR AND DEMOCRACY. By. W.
Smron-Warson, D.Litt., J. DoveR WILSON, ALFRED E
ZIMMERN, and ARTHUR GREENWOOD, 24th Thousand
Crown 8Svo. 228. net.
This volume has been written as a guide to the study of the under-
Jying causes and issues of the War, “It is,” says the English Review,
#jndispensable to all who would understand the position of European
affairs to-day.”
LONDON: MACMILLAN AND CO,, LrT»p.