Bibliographic Information

Psychology and deterrence

Robert Jervis, Richard Ned Lebow, Janice Gross Stein ; with contributions by Patrick M. Morgan and Jack L. Snyder

(Perspectives on security)

J. Hopkins University Press, c1985

  • : alk. paper
  • : pbk

Available at  / 13 libraries

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Note

Bibliography: p. 233-262

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Detterence is the most basic concept in American foreign policy today. But past practice indicates it often fails to work - and may increase the risk of war. Psychology and Deterrence reveals this stratgy's hidden and generally simplistic assumptions about the nature of power and aggression, threat and response, and calculation and behavior in the international arena. Most current analysis, the authors, note, ignore decisionmakers' emotions, preceptions, and domestic political needs, assuming instead that people repond to crisis in highly rational ways. Examining the historical evidence from a psychological perspective, Psychology and Deterrence offers case studies on the origins of World War I, the 1973 Arab-Israeli conflict, and the Falklands Wars as seen by the most important participants. These case studies reveal national leaders to be both more cautious and more reckless than theory would predict. They also show how deterrence strategies often backfire by aggravating a nation's sense of insequrity, thereby calling forth the very behavior they seek to prevent. The authors' conclusions offer important insights for superpower bargaining and nuclear deterrence.

Table of Contents

Preface and Acknowledgments Chapter 1. Introduction: Approach and Assumptions Chapter 2. Perceiving and Coping with Threat Chapter 3. Calculation, Miscalculation, and Conventional Deterrence I: The View from Cairo Chapter 4. Calculation, Miscalculation, and Conventional Deterrence II: The View from Jerusalem Chapter 5. Miscalculation in the South Atlantic: The Origins of the Falklands War Chapter 6. Saving Face for the Sake of Detterence Chapter 7. Perceptions of the Security Dilemma in 1914 Chapter 8. The Deterrence Deadlock: Is There a Way Out? Chapter 9. Conclusions Notes Index

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