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  • av Rianne Subijanto
    419 - 1 455,-

  • av Dan Reiter
    359,-

    How do foreign policy-makers learn from history? When do states enter alliances? Beginning with these two questions, Dan Reiter uses recent work in social psychology and organization theory to build a formative-events model of learning in international politics.

  • - An Introduction
    av Professor Richard Polt
    369 - 1 455,-

    Richard Polt provides a lively and accessible introduction to one of the most influential and intellectually demanding philosophers of the modern era. Covering the entire range of Heidegger's thought, Polt skillfully communicates the essence of the...

  • av Mikko Immanen
    369 - 1 439,-

  • av Mark Cruse
    789,-

    "Focusing on the late Middle Ages (1221-1422), this book examines various forms of contact between France and the Mongols; the ways in which authors, illuminators, manuscript makers, and patrons understood and imagined the Mongols; and France's place in the Global Middle Ages"--

  • av Wolfram H. Dressler
    409 - 1 455,-

  • - The Pharmaceutical Industry and Modern Japan
    av Timothy M. Yang
    475 - 655

  • - Party Machines and Grassroots Politics in Southeast Asia
    av Meredith L. Weiss
    359 - 505

    The Roots of Resilience examines governance from the ground up in the world's two most enduring electoral authoritarian or "e;hybrid"e; regimes-Singapore and Malaysia-where politically liberal and authoritarian features are blended to evade substantive democracy. Although skewed elections, curbed civil liberties, and a dose of coercion help sustain these regimes, selectively structured state policies and patronage, partisan machines that effectively stand in for local governments, and diligently sustained clientelist relations between politicians and constituents are equally important. While key attributes of these regimes differ, affecting the scope, character, and balance among national parties and policies, local machines, and personalized linkages-and notwithstanding a momentous change of government in Malaysia in 2018-the similarity in the overall patterns in these countries confirms the salience of these dimensions. As Meredith L. Weiss shows, taken together, these attributes accustom citizens to the system in place, making meaningful change in how electoral mobilization and policymaking happen all the harder to change. This authoritarian acculturation is key to the durability of both regimes, but, given weaker party competition and party-civil society links, is stronger in Singapore than Malaysia. High levels of authoritarian acculturation, amplifying the political payoffs of what parties and politicians actually provide their constituents, explain why electoral turnover alone is insufficient for real regime change in either state.

  • av Felix Krawatzek
    729

  • av Barbara Junisbai
    585,-

    "This book analyzes patronage conflicts pitting presidential family members against other elite groupings in a series of personalist authoritarian regimes, beginning with Kazakhstan in the early 2000s"--

  •  
    755,-

    "The Dialectics of Absolute Nothingness examines the influence of German philosophical traditions on the development of the Kyoto School. Contributors explore the Kyoto School's engagement with Western thought, highlighting the centrality of German philosophy while also showing the many ways the Kyoto School critiques the philosophical traditions it incorporates"--

  • av Adi Nester
    409 - 1 455,-

  • av Adam Reed
    475 - 1 455,-

  • av Nitzan Itzhak Lebovic
    419 - 1 439,-

  • av Nicholas D. Anderson
    665,-

    "This book investigates territorial expansion that was neither intended nor initially authorized by state leaders. Using case studies involving the United Kingdom, the United States, Russia, France, Japan, Italy, and Germany, the author shows that inadvertent expansion results when leaders in the capital have limited control over their agents on the periphery and when the geopolitical risks associated with keeping the acquired territory are perceived to be low"--

  • av Pal Kolstø
    739,-

    "This book explores the "traditional values" strategy of the Russian Orthodox Church under president Vladimir Putin and in particular its views on family and sex, which is one of its most important concerns"--

  • av Marie A. Kelleher
    589,-

    "Study of the impact that famine had on the social bonds of a medieval city"--

  • av Julie R. Keresztes
    325 - 1 439,-

  • av Deana Jovanovic
    385 - 1 489,-

  • av Philip A. Martin
    565,-

    "This book examines rebel group field commanders and explains when these commanders resist government authority after war. Using Cãote d'Ivoire as a case study, the book argues that when rebel governance leads to strong commander-community ties, commanders possess greater capacity and motive to disobey governments after military integration"--

  • av Kathryn E. Goldfarb
    409 - 1 455,-

  • - Coming Up Close to Homelessness
    av Cathy A. Small
    265,-

  • av Howard M. Reisman
    375,-

    "This book provides a review of the 155 species likely encountered. An addendum includes 89 warm water fishes that occasionally occur. A number of the major species discussed have commercial and recreational value. The status of those fisheries and their management are discussed"-- Provided by publisher.

  • av Rachel Chin
    385 - 1 439,-

    Reimagining Citizenship in Postwar Europe maps the generation and growth of novel forms of belonging in the years after World War II, crisscrossing the continent from Madrid to Warsaw and from Athens to London. Even as Europe struggled to rebuild, new forms of identity, statehood, and citizenship were beginning to take shape.Rachel Chin and Samuel Clowes Huneke bring together a diverse group of scholars to illustrate how citizenship was reimagined in the postwar decades in unusual settings and unexpected ways, while highlighting how ordinary citizens, living in democratic and authoritarian regimes alike, struggled to forge new kinds of belonging through which to assert their human rights and human dignity. Ultimately, Reimagining Citizenship in Postwar Europe contends that if we are to grapple with fraying citizenship in the twenty-first century, we must first look to when, how, and why citizenship originated in the calamitous years after World War II.

  • - Emerging Media, Space, and Sociality in Contemporary Berlin
    av Jordan H Kraemer
    409 - 1 439,-

  • - Policy Alternatives for U.S. Nuclear Security from the 1950s to the 1990s
    av David Goldfischer
    359,-

    A fundamental question posed by the demise of the cold war is whether the superpowers' monumentally dangerous and costly arms buildup was necessary. Was it inevitable that the United States and the Soviet Union acquire capabilities to destroy each other in a nuclear war? Or could they have agreed instead to address the nuclear danger through mutual emphasis on defenses? Might such an approach be a feasible option for nuclear powers in today's world?Examining crucial episodes in U.S. security history from the Truman years through the Reagan administration, David Goldfischer considers how figures including J. Robert Oppenheimer, Donald G. Brennan, Freeman Dyson, and Jonathan Schell advanced compelling arguments for seeking an arms control agreement favoring defenses against nuclear attack. Goldfischer offers provocative explanations for why this approach, known as "mutual defense emphasis" (MDE), was rejected in favor of the offense-dominated strategies of nuclear warfighting or "mutual assured destruction" (MAD). The failure seriously to explore MDE, he shows, left supporters of arms control with a false choice between the extremes of MAD and a utopian search for complete nuclear disarmament. Goldfischer concludes with a discussion of how the "Strategic Defense Initiative" (Star Wars)--which used the rhetoric of MDE to mask a renewed search for a nuclear warfighting strategy--has since the 1980s undermined the prospect for serious debate over defense emphasis.Policymakers, activists, political scientists, and scholars and students of security studies and postwar U.S. defense history will welcome this book.

  • - The Material and Mundane Lives of Buddhist Nuns in Post-Mao Tibet
    av Yasmin Cho
    359 - 1 439,-

  • - Lessons from Peripheral Wars
    av Deborah D Avant
    325,-

    Even powerful states face disaster if their armies do not adapt military doctrine to meet new challenges. Comparing the cases of the United States Army in Vietnam and the British Army during the Boer War and the Malayan Emergency, Deborah D. Avant offers a new account of the conditions that help shape doctrine within military organizations.Drawing on the new institutional economics, Avant assumes that actors at every level will seek to enhance their political power. Military organizations will thus respond to civilian goals when military leaders expect rewards for their responsiveness. Tracing the evolution of civil-military relations in the United States and Britain, Avant concludes that a nation's political structure has a major impact on the structure of military organizations and their formation of military doctrine.Avant finds in particular that structural differences between the British and U.S. governments have resulted in very different biases within the two armies. Unified political institutions in Britain worked to create an army that was sensitive to civilian goals. Conversely, the U.S. political system tended to allow adherence to classic principles of military science within the Army and often impeded effective civilian intervention. These contra sting conditions contributed to the relative ease with which the British Army adapted to new peripheral threats and the reluctance with which the U.S. Army responded to change in Vietnam.

  • - Negotiation as a Tool of Conflict
    av Eric Min
    549,-

    "This book is about theory and collection of supporting quantitative and qualitative empirical evidence regarding the strategic logic of negotiating during war"--Provided by publisher"--

  • - French and Canadian Martial Cultures, Indians, and the End of New France
    av Christian Ayne Crouch
    359 - 529,-

    This cultural history of the Seven Years' War in French-claimed North America focuses on the meanings of wartime violence and the profound impact of the encounter between Canadian, Indian, and French cultures of war and diplomacy.

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