By the mid-twentieth century interest in political philosophy had dwindled, with one writer even pronouncing the subject ''dead''. Things were to change in 1971, when the subject experienced a renaissance with the publication of John Rawls''s A Theory of Justice. The story didn''t end with Rawls however, as other avenues through which to approach the subject became available.
In Political Philosophy After 1945 Alan Haworth tells the story of political philosophy from the mid-twentieth century to the early twenty-first. First, he considers why the subject should have become marginalised by mainstream philosophical movements such as logical positivism and the ''ordinary language philosophy'' inspired by Wittgenstein. Subsequent chapters explain the fundamentals of Rawls''s theory, and then compare and contrast his contribution with that of other philosophers from across the political spectrum. These are followed by chapters in which alternative approaches are exami