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An assessment of the key factors contributing to both the success and failure of preventive diplomacy in the post-Cold War world. It examines 11 major post-Cold War cases including Croatia-Bosnia, Rwanda, the Baltics, Russia-Ukraine, Macedonia, North Korea and Iraq.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Overview: preventive diplomacy - a conceptual and analytic framework, Bruce W. Jentleson; the warning-response problem and missed opportunities in preventive diplomacy, Alexander L. George and Jane E. Holl. The dissolution of the Soviet Union: the war in Chechnya - opportunities missed, lessons to be learned, Gail Lapidus; the international community and the conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh, John J. Maresca; preventive diplomacy - success in the Baltics, Heather F. Hurlburt; preventive diplomacy for nuclear nonproliferation in the former Soviet Union, James E. Goodby. The breakup of Yugoslavia: costly disinterest - missed opportunities for preventive diplomacy in Croatia and Bosnia and Herzegovina, 1985-1991, Susan L. Woodward; preventive diplomacy for Macedonia, 1992-1998 - from containment to nation building, Michael S. Lund. Ethnic conflict in Africa: Somalia -misread crises and missed opportunities, Kenneth Menkhaus and Louis Ortmayer; preventive diplomacy in Rwanda - failure to act or failure of actions? Astri Suhrke and Bruce Jones; prevention gained and prevention lost - collapse, competition and coup in Congo, I. William Zartman and Katharina R. Vogeli. Rogue state aggression: opportunity seized - preventive diplomacy in Korea, Michael J. Mazarr. Conclusions: preventive diplomacy - analytic conclusions and policy lessons, Bruce W. Jentleson.
Über den Autor / die Autorin
Bruce W. Jentleson is professor of public policy and political science at Duke University.
Zusammenfassung
An assessment of the key factors contributing to both the success and failure of preventive diplomacy in the post-Cold War world. It examines 11 major post-Cold War cases including Croatia-Bosnia, Rwanda, the Baltics, Russia-Ukraine, Macedonia, North Korea and Iraq.