The
following categories contain links to helpful information for my
undergraduate and graduate students in international relations. In some
cases, these are links to information available elsewhere on the web;
in others, they are links to material I have created specifically for
this purpose. Your feedback
and suggestions for additions to this material are always
welcome.
Social
Science Basics
International
Relations
-
- The Foreign Affairs
website contains background information, opinion, and analysis of
various topics in international realtions.
- The Foreign
Policy in Focus website has reports on a wide
variety of foreign policy topics organized both regionally and
topically.
- The International
Crisis Group website offers reports on a variety of global
hotspots.
- The International
Crisis Behavior Project maintains an excellent archive of
information and data pertaining to international crises.
- An interview with
Kenneth Waltz in which he discusses theory in general, as
well as his own theory of international politics.
- Two good sources of online map quizzes, to improve
your basic knowledge of geography, are:
- The Table
of Contents for Among
Nations: Readings in International Relations, the custom
reader for INR 2001 Introduction to International Relations, Fall 2010.
Game Theory &
Strategy
-
Mikhael
Shor's gametheory.net
website contains a superb collection of resources for the
study of game theory, including extensive links to other sites, lecture
notes, practice quizzes, and even games and examples of game theory
applied to popular culture.
- The Stanford
Encyclopedia of Philosophy entry on game
theory, which includes helpful definitions of most of the
basic concepts.
- Robert Nau, a business professor at Duke
University, can help you learn "Who's
who and what's what in the history of rational choice theory, broadly
defined."
- Paul Walker has prepared an excellent timeline
and history of game theory from antiquity to the present.
- David Levine's Economic and Game Theory
website contains a brief
overview of game theory as well as examples of recent
research, oriented particularly toward economic applications.
- The Constitution
Society's list of links on the "prisoner's
dilemma."
- Bryn Mawr College's Serendip interactive learning
system that lets you play
prisoner's dilemma online.
- The SMAC
team at the University of Science and Technology in Lille,
France, maintains a detailed website focusing on iterated prisoner's dilemma. This site includes
computer simulations that allow you to play
iterated prisoner's dilemma on line.
- For students in INR 3303
("Foreign Policymaking"):
- Practice
problems
and solutions
for calculating expected utility, in PDF format
(download the problems first, and try to solve them; download the
solutions later).
- Practice
problems
and solutions
for finding rollback equilibria in extensive form games,
in PDF format.
- Practice
problems
and solutions
for finding Nash equilibria, in PDF format.
- More
practice problems (#2)
and solutions (#2)
for finding Nash equilibria, in PDF format.
- Practice
problems
and solutions
for finding mixed strategy equilibria, in PDF
format.
- More
practice problems (#2)
and solutions (#2)
for finding mixed strategy equilibria, in PDF
format.
Japan and East Asia
Study Guides and Assignments
Japanese and Asian News
Sources
Commentary on Japan's Foreign Relations
Japanese Security & Defense Issues
Japanese Economic and Trade Issues
- Bank of Japan
website, which includes a good deal of economic data.
Political Psychology
|