'William Thornton Rickert Fox' (1912-1988) was a former American
foreign policy professor and
international relations theorician at the
Columbia University (1950-1980,
emeritus 1980-1988).
[1] He is perhaps mostly known as the coiner of the term
superpower in 1943. He has written several books about the foreign policy of the
United States of America and the
United Kingdom (and its predecessor: the
British Empire). He was also a pioneer in establishing the systematic study of statecraft and war as an academic discipline.
Academic career
He obtained his Ph.D at the
University of Chicago.
[2] He became in 1951 the first director of the Institute of War and Peace Studies (which was later renamed into the Saltzman Institute of War and Peace Studies).
[3] He was also an advisory board member of the
Journal of International Affairs from 1952 until 1988
[4] and the president of the
International Studies Association (ISA) in 1972-1973.
[5]
Superpower
Fox coined the word "superpower" in his 1943 book ''Superpowers: the United States, Britain, and the Soviet union—their responsibility for peace'' to identify a new category of power able to occupy the highest status in a world in which, as the war then raging demonstrated, states could challenge and fight each other on a global scale. According to him, there were (at that moment) three states that were superpowers: the
United States, the
Soviet Union, and the
British Empire.
Notable students
★
Kenneth Waltz[6]
Books and articles
Articles
★ "Science, Technology and International Politics" in ''International Studies Quarterly, Vol. 12, No. 1. (Mar., 1968), pp. 1-15.
★ ""The Truth Shall Make You Free": One Student's Appreciation of
Quincy Wright" in ''The
Journal of Conflict Resolution'', Vol. 14, No. 4. (Dec., 1970), pp. 449-452.
★ "The Problems of War Termination: The Causes of Peace and Conditions of War" in the ''Annals of the
American Academy of Political and Social Science'', Vol. 392, How Wars End. (Nov., 1970), pp. 1-13.
Books
★ ''Superpowers: the United States, Britain, and the Soviet union—their responsibility for peace'' (1943)
★ ''Theoretical Aspects of International Relations'' (editor, 1959)
★ ''Nato and the range of American choice'' (1967)
★ ''European Security and the Atlantic System'' (editor, 1973)
★ ''A Continent Apart The United States and Canada in World Politics'' (1985)
References
1. [1]
2. [2]
3. Saltzman Institute of War and Peace Studies, [3]
4. http://jia.sipa.columbia.edu/prevadvisory_boards.shtml
5. http://www.isanet.org/handbook/hist.html
6. [4]