Balance of power : theory and practice in the 21st century [Material Impreso] / edited by T. V. Paul, James J. Wirtz and Michel Fortmann
Datos de publicación: Stanford: Stanford University, c2004Descripción: xiv, 384 p. 23 x 15 cm. IMPRESOISBN: 978-0-8047-5017-2Tema(s): AMÉRICA LATINA | PODER POLÍTICO | TEORIA DE LAS RELACIONES INTERNACIONALES | RELACIONES INTERNACIONALES | PODER | POLITICA INTERNACIONAL | EUROPA | ASIA | ORIENTE MEDIOResumen: Contiene: Introduction: the enduring axioms of balance of power theory and their contemporary relevance. I. Theories of balance of power and major powers. 1. What do great powers balance against and when?. 2. Great powers in the post-cold war world: a power transition perspective. 3. The political economy of balance of power theory. II. New security challenges and balance of power. 4. The war on terrorism and the balance of power: the paradoxes of american hegemony. 5. The balance of power paradox. 6. A world not in the balance: war, politics and wepons of mass destruction. III. Regional subsystems and balance of power. 7. Europe hedges its security bets. 8. Revisiting balance of power theory in Central Eurasia. 9. The international system and regional balance in the Middle East. 10. Bipolarity and balancing in East Asia. 11. The South Asian security balance in a western dominant world. 12. Regime type and regional security in Latin America: toward a "balance of identity" theory. 13. Conclusions: balance of power at the turn of the new century.Tipo de ítem | Biblioteca de origen | Signatura topográfica | Estado | Fecha de vencimiento | Código de barras | |
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Libro Sala | Pocitos | 327.101 PAU | Disponible | P28564 |
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Contiene: Introduction: the enduring axioms of balance of power theory and their contemporary relevance. I. Theories of balance of power and major powers. 1. What do great powers balance against and when?. 2. Great powers in the post-cold war world: a power transition perspective. 3. The political economy of balance of power theory. II. New security challenges and balance of power. 4. The war on terrorism and the balance of power: the paradoxes of american hegemony. 5. The balance of power paradox. 6. A world not in the balance: war, politics and wepons of mass destruction. III. Regional subsystems and balance of power. 7. Europe hedges its security bets. 8. Revisiting balance of power theory in Central Eurasia. 9. The international system and regional balance in the Middle East. 10. Bipolarity and balancing in East Asia. 11. The South Asian security balance in a western dominant world. 12. Regime type and regional security in Latin America: toward a "balance of identity" theory. 13. Conclusions: balance of power at the turn of the new century.
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