BIBLIOGRAPHY : SECTION OF DIPLOMACY 453 



Some Problems of International Arbitration, address before the Xew York State 

 Bar Association, January 20, 1904; Dean, Preserving the World's Peace, in 

 The World's Work for March, 1905. 



IV. The literature tearing on the relation of diplomacy to economics is too 

 varied and voluminous for even a partial citation here, for it includes the entire 

 theory and history of population, production, commerce, and colonization. 

 Many interesting facts may be found in Mill, The International Geography, New 

 York, 1900; and Adams, A Textbook of Commercial Geography, New York, 1901. 

 Synthetic treatment is much to be desired. 



The problem of cosmopolitanism versus nationalism is discussed from many 

 points of view in Novicow, Die Foderation Europas, Berlin, 1901, and other 

 works in French and Italian by the same author. 



V. The relation of diplomacy to ethics has received practically no specific 

 treatment, which can proceed only from a moral conception of the state and 

 the conscience of enlightened peoples. 



VI. For a knowledge of the place accorded to diplomacy in modern education, 

 reference may be made to the programmes of colleges and universities. Among 

 these, the courses of study offered by the Ecole Libre des Sciences Politiques at 

 Paris and by the School of Jurisprudence and Diplomacy of The George Wash- 

 ington University, at Washington, D. C., are the most complete. For the edu- 

 cational attainments required for admission to the diplomatic service of the 

 various countries, see their respective official foreign office publications. 



