Fr. 89.00

The Ethnic Dimension in International Relations

English · Hardback

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Description

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This book focuses on ethnic nationalism and its universality as a phenomenon in world politics. By employing case studies, the essays demonstrate the past, current, and future persistence of this fragmenting tendency and its implications for various regional and world-wide political dynamics. By its very comprehensiveness and geographic case diversity, the study provides evidence that there are two simultaneous (and sometimes contradictory) dynamics taking place in the international political arena--integration and fragmentation. This collection of essays analyzes fragmentation. There are significant implications for description, analysis, evaluation, and prescriptive policy in international relations.

This book challenges the bias in post-war America (and the West overall) that the preeminent, if not exclusive, political behavior tendency in regional and world politics is integration of actors and their behavior. While not seeking to refute or deny integration, it suggests balancing the analysis of international politics by upgrading the fragmentation tendencies based upon a very basic phenomenon--ethnic nationalism.

List of contents










Introduction: Ethnic-Nationalism and the New World Order of International Relations
Ethno-Nationalism and International Relations Textbook Literature
The Miskito Nation and the Geopolitics of Self-Determination
Tibetan Ethno-Nationalism and International Politics
Players or Playing Cards? The Palestinians and the Gulf Crisis
Ethno-Nationalism and International Relations in Soviet Azerbaijan
Harmonizing Competing Ethno-Nationalisms?: A Bill of Rights for a New South Africa
Ethno-Nationalism in the Soviet Union: The Case of the Baltic States
The Kurds
The International Political Activism of Indigenous Peoples and the World System
The Eritrean National Question


About the author










BERNARD SCHECHTERMAN is Professor and former Chair of the Department of Political Science at the University of Miami. He is the editor-in-chief of the Political Chronicle. He has edited two books and published many articles on Middle East Politics.

MARTIN SLANN is Professor of Political Science at Clemson University. He is the editor of Journal of Poltical Science, author or co-author of textbooks in American and comparative politics, and several essays on Israeli politics.


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