Skip to product information
1 of 1

Collective Preventive Diplomacy

Regular price £72.50
Sale price £72.50 Regular price £72.50
Sale Sold out
Examines how and why great powers act to defuse ethnic conflict within small powers.Powerful nations have often assumed a leadership role in international relations by becoming involved in ethnic c...
Read More
  • Format:
  • 23 June 2004
View Product Details

Examines how and why great powers act to defuse ethnic conflict within small powers.

Powerful nations have often assumed a leadership role in international relations by becoming involved in ethnic conflict arising within small states. Recently however, their willingness to do so, at least unilaterally, has diminished. This study focuses on why and how powerful nations have acted together to dampen or forestall the expansion of small state conflicts while limiting potential risks to themselves. Employing a case-study method, Barry H. Steiner distinguishes between two types of collective preventive diplomacy, the insulationist and the interventionist. In the former, powerful nations are motivated to contain small power conflict in order to preserve their relations with other powerful nations. In the latter, they act to settle conflict between the small power antagonists themselves.

files/i.png Icon
Price: £72.50
Pages: 267
Publisher: State University of New York Press
Imprint: SUNY Press
Series: SUNY series in Global Politics
Publication Date: 23 June 2004
ISBN: 9780791459874
Format: Hardcover
BISACs:

REVIEWS Icon

"…an important book that breaks new ground in analyzing the dynamics among the great powers that determine the prospects and patterns of collective action to defuse ethnic conflict in smaller states." — Perspectives on Politics

"Fascinating to read, enormously thorough, detailed, and authoritative in a huge range of topics. Steiner has taken a complicated subject and, in several case studies that span two centuries, carefully arrived at conclusions that can be a guide to current and future action and understanding." — I. William Zartman, coeditor of Peacemaking in International Conflict: Methods and Techniques

"A fine study, which fills an important gap in the literature of the past decade on preventive diplomacy and related problems." — Alexander L. George, coauthor of Presidential Personality and Performance

List of Tables and Illustrations
Acknowledgments


Part 1: Framework and Concepts


1. Introduction
2. Insulation and Intervention: A Conceptual Overview
3. Forging Great-Power Consensus


Part 2: The History


4. The Cases


Part 3: Case Analysis


5. Local Ethnic Conflict as an International Problem
6. Great-Power Objectives and Agenda Making
7. Conciliating the Antagonists
8. From Conciliation to Coercion
9. The Endgame


Part 4: Conclusions


10. Implications for Policy


Notes


Selected Bibliography

List of Books in the SUNY series in Global Politics


Index