Ted Hopf
- International Relations Theory
- Identity
Professor Hopf is interested in international relations theory, identity,
methodology, and the former Soviet space. He has written a book on deterrence
theory and Soviet foreign policy in the Third World (Peripheral Visions
(University of Michigan Press, 1994) and edited a volume on contemporary Russian
foreign policy, Understandings of Russian Foreign Policy (Pennsylvania
State University Press, 1999). His new book, Social Construction of
International Politics: Identities and Foreign Policies, Moscow, 1955 and 1999
(Cornell, 2002), applies a social cognitive account of identity to Soviet and
Russian foreign policy. Other publications have appeared in the American
Political Science Review, International Security, European Journal
of International Relations, and Security Studies.
Selected Publications:
2002. Social Construction of International Politics. Identities and Foreign Policies, Moscow 1955 and 1999Ithaca: Cornell University Press
2002. “Making the Future Inevitable: Legitimatizing, Naturalizating, and Stabilizing the Transition in Estonia, Ukraine, and Uzbekistan” European Journal of International Relations 8(3).
Curriculum Vitae (pdf)