World Politics: Institutions, Interests, Interactions
New perspectives and tools enrich 3l’s framework

With its innovative 3l’s framework based around interests, interactions, and institutions, the Sixth Edition of World Politics takes a contemporary approach to the international relations course, presenting students with puzzles about the world around them. Two new co-authors, Susan Hyde (University of California, Berkeley) and Stephanie Rickard (London School of Economics), bring fresh insights to the international political economy chapters, as well as to emerging topics of interest in the course, including human migration, human rights, and the environment. A new Norton Illumine Ebook provides an interactive environment for students to read, learn, and apply the 3Is framework to examples in the book and beyond.

Highlights of the Sixth Edition’s new content:

  • New co-authors Stephanie Rickard and Susan Hyde bring a next-generation approach to the 3I’s framework, offering fresh perspectives on international political economy and on emerging areas of scholarship, such as human rights, deglobalization, and the environment.
  • Significant revisions to the following chapters: Ch. 7, now titled Cross-Border Flows of Goods and Services; Ch. 8, now titled Cross-Border Flows of Money and People; Ch. 11: International Law and Norms; Ch. 12: Human Rights; and Ch.13: The Global Environment.
  • The authors explore contemporary themes in international relations across all chapters, including democratic backsliding, the rise of authoritarianism, and the spread of populism.
  • New and revised “What Shaped Our World ” and “How Do We Know ” pedagogy provide windows into historical and contemporary events and data using the three I’s framework.
  • A new Norton Illumine Ebook provides a robust interactive environment for students to read, learn, and apply the concepts of the course. Features include Dynamic Data Figures, which allow students to investigate the data in figures and tables, and end-of-section Check Your Understanding Questions, which confirm students’ understanding of key concepts and provide opportunities to apply the 3Is framework.
1147757551
World Politics: Institutions, Interests, Interactions
New perspectives and tools enrich 3l’s framework

With its innovative 3l’s framework based around interests, interactions, and institutions, the Sixth Edition of World Politics takes a contemporary approach to the international relations course, presenting students with puzzles about the world around them. Two new co-authors, Susan Hyde (University of California, Berkeley) and Stephanie Rickard (London School of Economics), bring fresh insights to the international political economy chapters, as well as to emerging topics of interest in the course, including human migration, human rights, and the environment. A new Norton Illumine Ebook provides an interactive environment for students to read, learn, and apply the 3Is framework to examples in the book and beyond.

Highlights of the Sixth Edition’s new content:

  • New co-authors Stephanie Rickard and Susan Hyde bring a next-generation approach to the 3I’s framework, offering fresh perspectives on international political economy and on emerging areas of scholarship, such as human rights, deglobalization, and the environment.
  • Significant revisions to the following chapters: Ch. 7, now titled Cross-Border Flows of Goods and Services; Ch. 8, now titled Cross-Border Flows of Money and People; Ch. 11: International Law and Norms; Ch. 12: Human Rights; and Ch.13: The Global Environment.
  • The authors explore contemporary themes in international relations across all chapters, including democratic backsliding, the rise of authoritarianism, and the spread of populism.
  • New and revised “What Shaped Our World ” and “How Do We Know ” pedagogy provide windows into historical and contemporary events and data using the three I’s framework.
  • A new Norton Illumine Ebook provides a robust interactive environment for students to read, learn, and apply the concepts of the course. Features include Dynamic Data Figures, which allow students to investigate the data in figures and tables, and end-of-section Check Your Understanding Questions, which confirm students’ understanding of key concepts and provide opportunities to apply the 3Is framework.
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World Politics: Institutions, Interests, Interactions

World Politics: Institutions, Interests, Interactions

World Politics: Institutions, Interests, Interactions

World Politics: Institutions, Interests, Interactions

(Sixth Edition)

$126.75 
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Overview

New perspectives and tools enrich 3l’s framework

With its innovative 3l’s framework based around interests, interactions, and institutions, the Sixth Edition of World Politics takes a contemporary approach to the international relations course, presenting students with puzzles about the world around them. Two new co-authors, Susan Hyde (University of California, Berkeley) and Stephanie Rickard (London School of Economics), bring fresh insights to the international political economy chapters, as well as to emerging topics of interest in the course, including human migration, human rights, and the environment. A new Norton Illumine Ebook provides an interactive environment for students to read, learn, and apply the 3Is framework to examples in the book and beyond.

Highlights of the Sixth Edition’s new content:

  • New co-authors Stephanie Rickard and Susan Hyde bring a next-generation approach to the 3I’s framework, offering fresh perspectives on international political economy and on emerging areas of scholarship, such as human rights, deglobalization, and the environment.
  • Significant revisions to the following chapters: Ch. 7, now titled Cross-Border Flows of Goods and Services; Ch. 8, now titled Cross-Border Flows of Money and People; Ch. 11: International Law and Norms; Ch. 12: Human Rights; and Ch.13: The Global Environment.
  • The authors explore contemporary themes in international relations across all chapters, including democratic backsliding, the rise of authoritarianism, and the spread of populism.
  • New and revised “What Shaped Our World ” and “How Do We Know ” pedagogy provide windows into historical and contemporary events and data using the three I’s framework.
  • A new Norton Illumine Ebook provides a robust interactive environment for students to read, learn, and apply the concepts of the course. Features include Dynamic Data Figures, which allow students to investigate the data in figures and tables, and end-of-section Check Your Understanding Questions, which confirm students’ understanding of key concepts and provide opportunities to apply the 3Is framework.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781324115939
Publisher: Norton, W. W. & Company, Inc.
Publication date: 07/01/2026
Edition description: Sixth Edition
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 1.25(h) x 9.00(d)

About the Author

Jeffry Frieden is Professor of International and Public Affairs and Political Science at Columbia University and Professor of Government emeritus at Harvard University. He specializes in the politics of international economic relations. Frieden is the author of Global Capitalism: Its Fall and Rise in the Twentieth Century (2007; second updated edition 2020); of Currency Politics: The Political Economy of Exchange Rate Policy (2015); and the co-author (with Menzie Chinn) of Lost Decades: The Making of America's Debt Crisis and the Long Recovery (2012). Frieden is also the author of Debt, Development, and Democracy: Modern Political Economy and Latin America, 1965–1985 (1992), of Banking on the World: The Politics of American International Finance (1987), and the co-author or co-editor of over a dozen other books on related topics. His articles on the politics of international economic issues have appeared in a wide variety of scholarly and general-interest publications.

David A. Lake is presently a Distinguished Professor of the Graduate Division at the University of California, San Diego. He was formerly the Jerri-Ann and Gary E. Jacobs Professor of Social Sciences (2010–2024) and Distinguished Professor of Political Science (2009–2024). The author and co-editor of numerous books and over 100 articles and chapters, he has published widely in international relations theory and international political economy. His most recent book is Indirect Rule: The Making of U.S. International Hierarchy (2024). He has served as President of the American Political Science Association (2016–2017) and President of the International Studies Association (2010–2011). The recipient of UCSD Chancellor’s Associates Awards for Excellence in Graduate Education (2005) and Excellence in Research in Humanities and Social Sciences (2013), he was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 2006.

Kenneth A. Schultz is William Bennett Munro Professor of Political Science at Stanford University. His research examines international conflict and conflict resolution, with particular focus on the domestic political influences on foreign policy choices. He is the author of Democracy and Coercive Diplomacy, as well as numerous book chapters and articles in scholarly journals. He received the 2003 Karl Deutsch Award from the International Studies Association, and the 2011 Dean’s Award for Distinguished Teaching from Stanford’s School of Humanities and Sciences.

Susan D. Hyde is a Professor of Political Science and Robson Chair at the University of California, Berkeley, where she has served as the co-director of the Institute of International Studies (2021-present), Chair of the Department of Political Science (AY 2021–2014), and the elected Executive Director of the Evidence in Governance and Politics Research Network (2016–2018). Prior to joining the faculty at UC Berkeley, she was a professor at Yale University from 2006–2016, and held residential fellowships at the Brookings Institution in Washington, D.C. and Princeton University’s Niehaus Center for Globalization and Governance. Her work has been published widely on international norms, democracy promotion, global governance, and the global diffusion of elections and threats to democracy.

Stephanie Rickard is a Professor of Political Science in the Department of Government at the London School of Economics. Her research explores issues at the intersection of politics and international economics, including global trade, subsidies, industrial policy, and financial rescues. Her award-winning book, Spending to Win (Cambridge University Press), examines how economic geography shapes national policies and international economic relations. Beyond academia, she actively engages in policy debates, including shaping the UK’s subsidy control regime. Having lived and worked in several countries, she offers a global perspective on the complex interplay between politics and economics.
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