National Interest/National Honor: The Diplomacy of the Falklands CrisisBloomsbury Academic, 1989 - 372 páginas This significant contribution to the literature of international politics and diplomacy assesses the three failed peacemaking attempts during the Falklands crisis of 1982. Douglas Kinney examines the reasons for the failures in negotiations and offers several distinct but interrelated case studies in negotiating and third party mediation of international conflict. Using the Falklands crisis as an example, he examines the unique political context of the territorial crisis; what the Third World insists is the ongoing process of decolonization, the global spread of sophisticated military technologies, and the world arms bazaar. These changes in turn have led to new norms and new means of establishing territory and sovereignty, according to Kinney. Unchecked, they promise more brushfire wars like the approximately 200 the world has experienced in the peace prevailing since World War II. |
Contenido
Brushfire War Territory the Radicalization | 1 |
Nonaligned Resolutions on the Falklands | 10 |
Territorial Disputes | 17 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 15 secciones no mostradas
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
National Interest/National Honor: The Diplomacy of the Falklands Crisis Douglas Kinney Vista de fragmentos - 1989 |
National Interest/National Honor: The Diplomacy of the Falklands Crisis Douglas Kinney Sin vista previa disponible - 1989 |
Términos y frases comunes
Referencias a este libro
After Bipolarity: The Vanishing Threat, Theories of Cooperation, and the ... Fred Chernoff Sin vista previa disponible - 1995 |
Eagle Over the Ice: The U.S. in the Antarctic Christopher C. Joyner,Ethel R. Theis Vista de fragmentos - 1997 |