The post-Cold War order : diagnoses and prognoses
著者
書誌事項
The post-Cold War order : diagnoses and prognoses
(Canberra studies in world affairs)
Allen & Unwin , in association with Dept. of International Relations, Australian National University, 1993
- : pbk
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注記
Bibliography: p. 254-278
内容説明・目次
内容説明
The entirely unexpected ending of the Cold War is forcing scholars of international relations to rethink their basic assumptions. This book seeks to make three kinds of contribution to that rethinking: to the search for a new conceptual framework; to the redefinition of key global issues in the new setting; and to bringing perspectives from the Asia-Pacific region into global discussion.
目次
- The Cold War and its conclusion - conclusions for international relations theory, Fred Halliday
- liberal democracy. constitutionalism and the new world order, Andrew Linklater
- the end of geopolitics?, J.L. Richardson
- the Soviet break-up and the new Eurasian geopolitics, John Fitzpatrick
- alliances and the emerging post-Cold War security system, Joseph A. Camilleri
- nuclear weapons and the new world order, Paul Keal
- future hypothesis - a concert of powers?, Coral Bell
- sharing the burdens of victory - principles and problems of a concert of powers, Richard Leaver
- the future of the liberal trading order, Vinod K. Aggarwal
- the new disorder in the periphery, John Ravenhill
- America - the firsters, the decliners, and the searchers for a new American foreign policy, Henry S. Bienen
- where and how does Japan fit?, David B. Bobrow
- Japanese security policy after the end of the Cold War, Jiro Yamaguchi
- China and the new world order, Ian Wilson
- middle power diplomacy in the changing Asia-Pacific order - Australia and Canada compared, Kim Richard Nossal
- at the margin - the South Pacific and changing world order, Greg Fry
- key security issues in the Asia-Pacific, Andrew Mack.
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