More Details
-
Summary:
- Conflict--be it war between states, ethnic violence, civil war, or terrorist activity--endures, despite immense efforts to end it. How do states cope with conflict, minimize future threats, and reduce the risk of insecurity? Morgan outlines a spectrum of solutions states use to manage violent conflict, ranging from strategies that individual governments enact largely on their own, such as distribution of power, deterrence, or arms control, to those such as collective security and multilateralism that are more global in nature. The book progresses into tactical and practical actions, from negotiation and mediation to peace imposition. Morgan evaluates each strategy and tactic in terms of how well it addresses three levels of security--systemic, state, and societal--to show how they are interrelated and complementary to each other in important ways. Addressing insecurity at one level often elicits further insecurity at another. Morgan shows students how these various levels interact--either to a states advantage or to its detriment--so they can comprehensively analyze the ways that political actors manage (or incite) conflict.
-
Table of Contents:
- Preface
- An introduction to security in international relations
- The problem of war in international politics
- The appropriate distribution of power
- Seeking cheap victories
- Deterrence and arms control
- The great-power concert
- Wilsonian collective security
- Complex multilateralism and integration
- Negotiation and mediation
- Peacekeeping
- Peace enforcement and peace imposition
- Peacebuilding
- Conclusion.
-
Language Notes:
- Item content: English
-
General Notes:
- Includes bibliographical references (pages 309-320) and index.
-
Physical Description:
- xvi, 331 pages : illustrations ; 23 cm
-
Call Numbers:
- JZ5588 .M67 2006
-
ISBNs:
- 1568025874 (alk. paper)
9781568025872 (alk. paper)
2901568025871 [Invalid]
-
Library of Congress Control Numbers:
- 2006002953
-
OCLC Numbers:
- 63277774