Mutual perceptions of long-range goals : can the United States and the Soviet Union cooperate permanently?

書誌事項

Mutual perceptions of long-range goals : can the United States and the Soviet Union cooperate permanently?

Klaus Gottstein, editor

Westview Press , Campus Verlag, 1991

  • : us
  • : gw

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注記

"A publication of Research Unit Gottstein in the Max Planck Society"

Includes bibliographical references and index

内容説明・目次

内容説明

The recent historic changes in the political landscape of Europe have profoundly affected what used to be called East-West relations. It is not clear what the final outcome of the recent movements will be. Will there be a new, stable equilibrium, with a prospect of continued peaceful development? Or will the local and regional instabilities, already visible in some parts of Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union, also affect international relations, particularly those between the United States and the Soviet Union, between NATO and the Warsaw Pact, and among the major European nations? Whatever path history may take, it is clear that events will be deeply influenced by the perceptions acting elites hold of each other's long-range goals in the political reorientation of international relations. This study investigates such perceptions - including strategic, normative and imagined perceptions - of long-range political goals both in the East and in the West.

目次

  • Introductory remarks, Klaus Gottstein
  • Soviet perceptions of long-term Western developments, goals and constraints, Sergej Plekhanov
  • perestroika, new realities, and the future of East-West relations Vyacheslav Dashichev
  • recent change in the Soviet perception of the role of the United States in world politics, Egbert Jahn
  • American perceptions of Soviet aims, Raymond Garthoff
  • "containment then and now" - a note on G.F. Kennan's perception of the Soviet Union, Gottfried Niedhart
  • parallels between the polarization among Western analysts and Soviet supporters of perestroika, Arnold Buchholz
  • American perceptions of Western goals and constraints in western policy towards the Soviet Union - how much worse case thinking, John van Oudenaren
  • soviet perceptions of long-term development, goals and constraints effective in the USSR, Vladimir Baranovskij
  • an American's view of Soviet perceptions - assessing change, Richard Herrmann
  • the kaleidoscope of international decision-making - glimpsing the human factors in nuclear crisis, Rita Rogers
  • use of computer-based systems for policy-planning, decision support, and negotiations, Frances Nautner-Markhof
  • Soviet economic perceptions - features of a revaluation, Aleksandr Naumenkov
  • the new Soviet approach to the problem of regional conflicts, Vladimir Babak
  • changing views on the Soviet Union in Western Europe, Falk Bomsdorf
  • political understanding, perspectivism, and dialogue structure, Michael W. Richter
  • relaxation of tensions and areas of danger in the East-West relations, Yuri Shvedkov
  • ecological problems as reflected in East-West perceptions, Manfred Spath
  • analysis of the "international conference on the mutual perceptions of long-range goals in the East-West conflict", A. Ertelt-Vieth.

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