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  1. 16. Juli 2009 · Abstract. Sir Norman Angell, pioneer both of international relations as a distinct discipline and of the theory of globalization, winner of the Nobel Peace Prize, and one of the 20th century's leading internationalist campaigners on both sides of the Atlantic, lived the great illusion in three senses. First, his ‘life job’, as he came to ...

  2. 7. Feb. 2019 · Sir Norman Angell is perhaps the most well acknowledged intellectual in the early disciplinary history of international relations (IR) (Ashworth 2007, 122). In 1933, his recognition was such that by nomination of Hobson, Laski, and others, Angell became the first IR theorist to receive a Nobel Prize (Griffiths 1999, 54).

  3. www.nobelpeaceprize.org › laureates › 19331933 - Nobel Peace Prize

    Angell's peace concept became known as “angellism” and was disseminated through a network of societies for peace. The outbreak in August 1914 of World War I appeared to refute his main thesis, however. When in the autumn of 1934 the Nobel Committee awarded Angell the Prize that had been reserved from 1933, he was praised for his work as educator and defender of the League of Nations.

  4. Ralph Norman Angell Lane. * 26. Dezember 1874 in Holbeach. † 7. Oktober 1967 in Croydon. britischer Politiker, Politikwissenschaftler und Schriftsteller. Artikel in der Wikipedia. Bilder und Medien bei Commons. Zitate bei Wikiquote.

  5. In Sir Norman Angell. Angell’s most famous work, The Great Illusion (1910), translated into more than a score of languages, tried to establish the fallacy of the idea that conquest and war brought a nation great economic advantage and ensured its living space and access to markets, trade, and raw materials.

  6. 1. Feb. 2014 · British journalist, politician, world traveler and polymath Sir Ralph Norman Angell was a close follower of world events. This insightful volume takes an in-depth look at the Balkan conflicts of the early twentieth century and analyzes their impact on the global geopolitical balance of power, as well as relating the aftermath of the war to larger ideas about peace and detente.

  7. The Great Illusion ↑. Norman Angell was the pen-name used by Ralph Norman Lane (1872-1967), production manager of the continental edition of the Daily Mail, for his best-selling book, The Great Illusion (1910), the principal argument of which was that even if an invading Germany seized all the gold in the Bank of England it would lose "a thousand" times more than it gained because the ...