This book analyses the impacts and responses to twenty-five years of "peace" between Israel and the Palestine Liberation Organization. It focuses on understanding the various political economies that have emerged and how different communities have developed distinct coping strategies as well as new forms of political expression and mobilization.
An Account of Chilean-Turkish Diplomatic History, 1926-2018
Using archival records that have not been used in a scholarly publication before, Yaman Kepenc chronicles the diplomatic relations between the modern states of Chile and Turkey. Although geographically remote, the two states share a significant relationship that sheds light on the foreign policy of two modern states.
Improving a National Reputation from the Ashes of the Past
How can a rogue state with a bad national reputation for significant violations of global norms improve its reputation if it so desires? This book provides an assessment of the reputational process at work when rogues have been successful, or not, at improving their national reputations.
This book utilizes a number of previously unused sources to examine the relationship between Moscow and Havana in the period between the Russian and Cuban Revolutions. It provides a number of important conclusions including that prior to the January 1959, Moscow took considerable interest in the island as a multifaceted relationship existed.
How Congress and the President Really Make Foreign Policy
Foreign policy in the post-cold war era is profoundly complex, and so too are the institutions that share the responsibility to guide and manage America's relations with other countries.
A comprehensive examination of the American pursuit of the liberation of Eastern Europe from the end of World War II to the failure of the Hungarian revolution. It explores how American visions of freedom led to intervention worldwide and the legacy of the Cold War.
President Bush promised to democratize the Middle East, but the results so far have dispirited democracy advocates and brought their project into disrepute.
In 1941, Franklin Delano Roosevelt identified ''four essential human freedoms.'' Three of thesefreedom from fear, freedom of speech, and freedom of religionhad long been understood as defining principles of liberalism. Roosevelt's fourth freedomfreedom from wantwas not. Indeed, classic liberals had argued that the only way to guarantee this ......
This provocative book takes the form of a dialogue between French Foreign Minister Hubert Vedrine and international relations expert Dominique Moisi. Vedrine expresses his frank views of the U.