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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 November 2022
1 “Reflections on Deference,” in Rogow, Arnold A., ed., Politics, Personality, and Social Science in the Twentieth Century: Essays in Honor of Harold D. Lasswell (1969), p. 297.Google Scholar
2 Propaganda Technique in the World War (1927)
3 Psychopathology and Politics (1930).
4 Politics: Who Gets What, When, How (1936).
5 World Politics and Personal Insecurity (1935).
6 Among his 30-odd books, these titles suggest his postwar concerns: Power and Personality (1948), Language of Politics (with others, 1949), Power and Society (with Kaplan, A., 1950)Google Scholar, The World Revolution of Our Time (1951), Studies in World Public Order (with others, 1960), The Future of Political Science (1963), World Revolutionary Elites: Studies in Coercive Ideological Movements (with others, 1965), A Pre-View of Policy Sciences (1971 ), and The Signature of Power: Buildings, Communication, and Policy (posthumously, 1979).
7 In Somit, Albert, ed., Political Science and the Study of the Future (1974).Google Scholar
8 “The Political Science of Science,” APSR 50 (December 1956): 961–79.
9 “Future Systems of Identity in the World Community,” in Black, Cyril E. and Falk, Richard A., eds., The Future of the International Legal Order (1972).Google Scholar
10 With Willard Adkins, 1923.
11 All of these quotations come from my private conversations in 1975 with Lasswell. For a more extended discussion, cf. my introduction to a selection of his writings: Harold D. Lasswell on Political Sociology (1977).
12 “Self Analysis and Judicial Thinking,” Ethics, 40 (April 1930), p. 356.
13 A Pre-View of the Policy Sciences (1971), p. 80.
14 The Interpretations of Agreements and World Public Order (with others, 1967, p. xvii).