Pacific cooperation : building economic and security regimes in the Asia-Pacific region
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Pacific cooperation : building economic and security regimes in the Asia-Pacific region
(Studies in world affairs, 7)
Allen & Unwin in association with the Program on International Economics and Politics, East-West Center, Hawaii and Dept. of International Relations, RSPAS, ANU, Canberra, ACT, 1994
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Note
Includes bibliographical references
Description and Table of Contents
Description
This work provides an analysis of the Gulf War from perspectives which include the development of US policy, Australian and US reactions, and the more muted response of leading actors in the Asia-Pacific region, including that of the largest Muslim state in the world - Indonesia. It includes reflections on the way in which policy proceeded and was implemented and discussion on the ethics of its overall direction.
Table of Contents
- Washed in shades of grey, David Campbell
- quantum leaping - the Gulf debate in Australia and Canada, Kim Richard Nossal
- the Gulf war and Australian political culture, James Richardson
- economic sanctions, middle powers, and the Gulf war - the opportunity costs of a military solution, Richard Leaver
- the Gulf war and Australian defence - abberation or defining event?, Graeme Cheeseman
- Asian-Pacific responses to the Gulf war, Mohan Malik
- the bitterness of being right - reflection on alliance orthodoxy, the Gulf war and the new world order, Michael McKinley.
by "Nielsen BookData"