Fr. 109.30

Intervention - Shaping the Global Order

English · Hardback

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Description

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Intervention is a key concept for understanding global dynamics because of its presumed connection to international security. As the lone superpower, the United States, through military, economics, political, or diplomatic means, is largely responsible for structuring intervention choices-issues, debates, actions, and means-in the world community. Feste explores the implications of U.S. intervention in the unipolar framework by examining intervention policies, success, and failure in recent cases (the Gulf War, Panama, Haiti, Somalia, Rwanda, Bosnia, Kosovo, and Afghanistan), and learning experience outlined in alternative foreign policy doctrines. The U.S. intervention record during this period shows great variety in outcomes, not a patterned design nor a grand strategy. Most recent crises, she asserts, did not threaten world peace.

Post-Cold War U.S. intervention experience is compared with historical American involvement to understand when, where, why, and how often military contingents were sent abroad throughout the 20th century, alongside a timeline of intervention opportunities-defined as domestic and civil uprising in countries throughout the world-since the end of World War II. Among her conclusions: The United States has intervened for a variety of reasons-oil, terrorism, humanitarian assistance-but one factor, bad leadership in the target state, stands out. The United States increasingly, though not always, has turned to a multilateral strategy for intervention-seeking UN support, participating in multinational peacekeeping operations. The variety of intrastate crises and intervention responses coupled with superpower global obligations and the unipolar world structure means intervention will continue as a signficant, defining feature of international politics in the future.

List of contents










Illustrations
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Intervention Centrality: An Argument
Global Structure and American Intervention
World Perspectives and American Intervention
Policy Perspectives on American Intervention
Foreign Policy Doctrines on American Intervention
American Intervention: Post-Cold War Cases
American Intervention: Evolving Opportunities
American Intervention: Evolving Trends
Intervention Impact: An Assessment
Bibliography
Index


About the author

KAREN A. FESTE is Professor at the Graduate School of International Studies and Director of the Interdisciplinary Conflict Resolution Program at the University of Denver. She is the author of The Arab-Israeli Conflict: A Decision-Making Game (1977) and specializes on intervention strategy in world affairs.

Product details

Authors Karen Feste
Publisher Bloomsbury
 
Languages English
Age Recommendation ages 7 to 17
Product format Hardback
Released 30.09.2003
 
EAN 9780275959425
ISBN 978-0-275-95942-5
No. of pages 304
Weight 595 g
Subjects Social sciences, law, business > Political science > Political science and political education

POLITICAL SCIENCE / International Relations / General, International Relations, Politics, Law, and Government: International Relations

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