Crisis diplomacy : the great powers since the mid-nineteenth century
著者
書誌事項
Crisis diplomacy : the great powers since the mid-nineteenth century
(Cambridge studies in international relations, 35)
Cambridge University Press, 1994
- : hardback
- : paperback
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注記
Bibliography: p. 412-418
Includes index
内容説明・目次
内容説明
Although much has been written on international crises, the literature suffers from a lack of historical depth, and a proliferation of competing theoretical frameworks. Through case studies drawing on the rich historical experience of crisis diplomacy, James Richardson offers an integrated analysis based on a critical assessment of the main theoretical approaches. Due weight is given to systemic and structural factors, but also to the specific historical factors of each case, and to theories which do not presuppose rationality as well as those which do. Crisis diplomacy the major political choices made by decision makers, and their strategies, judgments and misjudgments - is found to play a crucial role in each of the case studies. This broad historical inquiry is especially timely when the ending of the Cold War has removed the settled parameters within which the superpowers conducted their crisis diplomacy.
目次
- Part I: 1. Introduction: aims and approaches
- 2. Theories of crisis behaviour
- 3. 'Crisis management' versus 'crisis diplomacy'
- Part II: 4. The Eastern crisis, 1839-1841
- 5. The Crimean war crisis, 1853-1854
- 6. The Russo-Japanese crisis, 1903-1904
- 7. The Sudeten crisis, 1938
- 8. The Franco-Prussian and Agadir crises
- 9. Pearl Harbor and the Berlin crises
- Part III: 10. Crises and the international system: arenas, alignments and norms
- 11. The choice of goals: values, interests and objectives
- 12. Selective perception and misperception
- 13. Crisis bargaining
- 14. Internal politics
- 15. The outcome and risk of war
- Part IV: 16. Conclusions: theory and policy.
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