Comparative foreign policy : adaptation strategies of the great and emerging powers
著者
書誌事項
Comparative foreign policy : adaptation strategies of the great and emerging powers
Prentice Hall, c2002
- : pbk
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注記
Includes bibliographical references (p. 268-281) and index
内容説明・目次
内容説明
A core text for courses in Comparative Foreign Policy, and a supplemental text for courses in Introduction to World Politics, Comparative Politics, and graduate seminars in Foreign Policy Analysis.
The first comprehensive, cross-national study of foreign policies to be published in the aftermath of the Cold War, this text is the direct successor to the classic, widely adopted Foreign Policy in World Politics by Roy Macridis (PH). Using a consistent format and accessible writing style, leading area specialists discuss the strategies employed by five "great powers" (The U.S., Russia, China, Japan, and the European Union), and five "emerging powers" (Brazil, India, Indonesia, Iran, and South Africa) to accommodate the rapid changes taking place around them. In all ten cases, major developments since the Cold War-including domestic upheavals and crises-have produced important consequences that extend far beyond their borders. Each chapter tells a distinct story of foreign policy adaptation, and collectively, they tell much of the story of world politics in this volatile era.
目次
1. Introduction: A Reader's Guide to Foreign-Policy Adaptation, Steven W. Hook.
I. ADAPTION STRATEGIES OF THE GREAT POWERS.
2. New Challenges in U.S. Foreign Policy, Howard Wiarda and Lana Wiley, University of Massachusetts.
3. Russia's Times of Trouble, William A. Clark, Louisiana State University.
3. Modernization, Nationalism, and Regionalism in China, Quansheng Zhao, American University.
5. Japan's Economic Route to Power, Robert Scalapino, University of California at Berkley.
6. European Union Foreign Policy: Still an Oxymoron?, James Sperling, University of Akron.
II. ADAPTION STRATEGIES OF THE EMERGING POWERS.
7. The Foreign Policy of Modern Brazil, Andrew Hurrell, Oxford University.
8. The Shifting Landscape of Indian Foreign Policy, Raju G.C. Thomas, Marquette University.
9. Indonesia: From Pivot to Problem, Donald E. Weatherbee, University of South Carolina.
10. Iran's Ambivalent World Role, Mohsen Milani, University of South Florida.
11. South Africa: From the Shadows, Peter J. Schraeder, Loyola University-Chicago.
Bibliography.
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