Collective Preventive Diplomacy: A Study in International Conflict Management

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SUNY Press, 2004 M06 23 - 255 páginas
Powerful nations have often assumed a leadership role in international relations by becoming involved in ethnic conflict arising within small states. Recently however, their willingness to do so, at least unilaterally, has diminished. This study focuses on why and how powerful nations have acted together to dampen or forestall the expansion of small state conflicts while limiting potential risks to themselves. Employing a case-study method, Barry H. Steiner distinguishes between two types of collective preventive diplomacy, the insulationist and the interventionist. In the former, powerful nations are motivated to contain small power conflict in order to preserve their relations with other powerful nations. In the latter, they act to settle conflict between the small power antagonists themselves.

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Contenido

Introduction
3
Insulation and Intervention A Conceptual Overview
23
Forging GreatPower Consensus
41
Eight Cases
65
Local Ethnic Conflict as an International Problem
87
GreatPower Objectives and Agenda Making
107
Conciliating the Antagonists
121
From Conciliation to Coercion
143
The Endgame
167
Implications for Policy
195
Notes
213
Selected Bibliography
237
List of Titles in the SUNY series in Global Politics
245
Index
249

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Barry H. Steiner is Professor of Political Science at California State University at Long Beach. He is the author of Bernard Brodie and the Foundations of American Nuclear Strategy.

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