Richard Ned Lebow
Richard Ned Lebow is an American political scientist best known for his work in international relations, political psychology, classics and philosophy of science. He is Professor Emeritus of International Political Theory at the Department of War Studies, King's College London, Honorary Fellow of Pembroke College, University of Cambridge, and James O. Freedman Presidential Professor Emeritus at Dartmouth College. Lebow also writes fiction. He has published a novel and collection of short stories and has recently finished a second novel.
Early life and education
Lebow was born in 1941 in France and was a refugee from Europe, the only member of his family to survive World War II. He was taken to an orphanage before being adopted by an American family and grew up in New York City. He graduated from Lynbrook Senior High School in 1959 in Long Island, New York.Lebow gained his BA degree from the University of Chicago, his masters from Yale University and his doctorate from City University of New York.
Career
Lebow taught political science, international relations, political psychology, political theory, methodology, public policy at universities in the United States and Europe and strategy at the Naval and National War Colleges. From 2002 until becoming emeritus in 2012, he was James O. Freedman Presidential Professor of Government at Dartmouth College. He taught courses in international relations, political psychology, political theory and Greek literature and philosophy. Since 2012, He has been professor of international political theory in the War Studies department of King’s College London and Bye-Fellow of Pembroke College, University of Cambridge. He taught courses on philosophy of science, scope and methods and ancient Greek conceptions of order and justice.Lebow has held visiting positions, including:
- Olof Palme Professor, University of Lund, 2011–12
- Centennial Professor of International Relations at the London School of Economics, 2009–11
- Visiting fellow at Pembroke College, University of Cambridge, 2010–11
- Visiting Professor, University of Cambridge, 2008-2011
- Former President of the International Society of Political Psychology
- Onassis Foundation Fellow in Ancient Greek History and Culture
- Overseas Fellow at St John's College, University of Cambridge.
Analysis
Lebow is a realist.Writing with Benjamin Valentino and critiquing power transition theory, Lebow states, "Power transition theorists have been surprisingly reluctant to engage historical cases in an effort to show that wars between great powers have actually resulted from the motives described by their theories."
Honours
- Co-recipient conference grant on the fragility and robustness of political orders, Swedish Foundation of Humanities and Social Sciences, 2020
- Choice Outstanding Academic Title Award, for Avoiding War, Making Peace, 2018
- Honourable Mention, Susan Strange Book Award for the best book of the year in international relations from the British International Studies Association for The Rise and Fall of Political Orders, 2018
- Election to the British Academy, 2017
- Honorable Mention, Charles A. Taylor Book Award for the best book in interpretative methodologies and methods, for Causation in International Relations, 2016
- Honorary Doctorate, Panteion University, Athens, Greece, 2015
- Choice Outstanding Academic Title Award, for Toni Erskine and Richard Ned Lebow, Tragedy and International Relations, 2014
- Teaching Excellence Award, King's College London, 2013
- Distinguished Scholar, International Studies Association, 2014
- Alexander L. George Award from the International Society of Political Psychology for the best book of the year
- Honorary Doctorate, American University of Paris, 2013
- Robert Jervis-Paul Schroeder Award for the best book in international history and politics from the American Political Science Association, 2009
- Susan Strange Award for the best book international relations from the British International Studies Association, 2009
Fiction
- Rough Waters and Other Stories
- Obsession
Scholarly Books since 2003
- Why Nations Still Fight
- Self and Social Fashioning: A Personal Account
- Multiple Selves: Identity, Self-Fashioning and Ethics
- Weimar’s Long Shadow
- Justice, East and West, and International Order, coauthored with Feng Zhang,
- The Quest for Knowledge in International Relations: How Do We Know?
- Reason and Cause: Social Science in a Social World
- Between Peace and War: 40th Anniversary Revised Edition
- Ethics and International Relations: A Tragic Perspective
- Taming Sino-American Rivalry, coauthored with Feng Zhang,
- A Democratic Foreign Policy
- The Rise and Fall of Political Orders.
- 4 vols.