Regional orders at century's dawn : global and domestic influences on grand strategy
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Bibliographic Information
Regional orders at century's dawn : global and domestic influences on grand strategy
(Princeton studies in international history and politics)
Princeton University Press, c1998
- : hbk
- : pbk
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-
National Graduate Institute for Policy Studies Library (GRIPS Library)
: hbk319||So3300207432,
: pbk319||So3301095463
Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. [290]-321) and index
Description and Table of Contents
- Volume
-
: hbk ISBN 9780691058795
Description
Etel Solingen provides an explanation of foreign policy based on how states throughout the world have confronted the rapid emergence of a global economy and international institutions. The text uses a key issue - internationalization - to clarify other debates, from the notion of a democratic peace to the relevance of security dilemmas, nationalism, and the impact of international institutions. The author discusses in detail the Middle East, Latin America's Southern Cone, and the Korean peninsula, and builds on examples drawn from almost every other region of the world.
- Volume
-
: pbk ISBN 9780691058801
Description
Etel Solingen provides a comprehensive explanation of foreign policy based on how states throughout the world have confronted the rapid emergence of a global economy and international institutions. A major advance in international relations theory, Regional Orders at Century's Dawn skillfully uses a key issue--internationalization--to clarify other recent debates, from the notion of a democratic peace to the relevance of security dilemmas, nationalism, and the impact of international institutions. The author discusses in rich detail the Middle East, Latin America's Southern Cone, and the Korean peninsula, and builds on examples drawn from almost every other region of the world. As Solingen demonstrates, economic liberalization--with its dramatic political and economic consequences--invariably attracts supporters and detractors, who join in coalitions to advance their agendas. Each coalition's agenda, or "grand strategy," has consequences at all levels: domestic, regional, and international. At home, coalitions struggle to define the internal allocation and management of resources, and to undermine their rivals.
Throughout their regional neighborhoods, coalitions opposing internationalization often compete for dominance, sometimes militarily. Coalitions favoring internationalization, instead, often cooperate. At the global level, each coalition finds support for its "grand strategies" from different international institutions and from competing global economic trends. Solingen's concept of "grand strategy" proposes more than a theory of foreign policy and explains the role of nationalism and ethno-religious revivalism in the politics of liberalization.
Table of Contents
List of AbbreviationsPrefacePt. 1The Theory1Ch. 1Introduction3Ch. 2Internationalization and Political Coalitions18Ch. 3Coalitions, Strategic Interaction, and Regional Outcomes62Ch. 4Economic Liberalization, Coalitions, and the Democratic Peace90Pt. 2The Empirics117Ch. 5The Southern Cone: Argentina and Brazil119Ch. 6The Middle East165Ch. 7The Korean Peninsula216Pt. 3Implications255Ch. 8Theory and Policy: An Agenda257References291Index323
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