Managing International Crises

Managing International Crises
Author: Daniel Frei
Publisher: SAGE Publications, Incorporated
Total Pages: 248
Release: 1982-10
Genre: Political Science
ISBN:

Managing International Crises contains original essays on the nature of international crises and how states behave during them. What effects do different kinds of diplomatic moves have on crises? Does a crisis have an inner logic, a dynamic of its own? What is the best way of managing these conflicts? Theoretical advances and new empirical research are offered by distinguished scholars. @3`The book is sure to stimulate thinking on crises management.' -- Nonaligned World, Vol 1 No 3, July-September 1983 @3`This collection brings together a comprehensive, authoritative, and eclectic survey of theorization, research, and practice dealing with crises as salient international events...the book is impressi

The Invention of International Relations Theory

The Invention of International Relations Theory
Author: Nicolas Guilhot
Publisher: Columbia University Press
Total Pages: 312
Release: 2011
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 0231152671

The 1954 Conference on Theory, sponsored by the Rockefeller Foundation, featured a 'who's who' of scholars and practitioners debating what would become the foundations of international relations theory. Assembling his own team of experts, the editor revisits a seminal event in the discipline.

Fixing Haiti

Fixing Haiti
Author: Jorge Heine
Publisher: United Nations University Press
Total Pages: 304
Release: 2011
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 9280811975

Haiti may well be the only country in the Americas with a last name. References to the land of the "black Jacobins" are almost always followed by the phrase "the poorest country in the Western Hemisphere". To that dubious distinction, on 12 January 2010 Haiti added another, when it was hit by the most devastating natural disaster in the Americas, a 7.0 Richter scale earthquake. More than 220,000 people lost their lives and much of its vibrant capital, Port-au-Prince, was reduced to rubble. Since 2004, the United Nations has been in Haiti through MINUSTAH, in an ambitious attempt to help Haiti raise itself by its bootstraps. This effort has now acquired additional urgency. Is Haiti a failed state? Does it deserve a Marshall-plan-like program? What will it take to address the Haitian predicament? In this book, some of the world's leading experts on Haiti examine the challenges faced by the first black republic, the tasks undertaken by the UN, and the new role of hemispheric players like Argentina, Brazil and Chile, as well as that of Canada, France and the United States.