The past fifty years have seen a shift in the European strategic
defence rationale, moving from territorial to collective security.
Crisis management, the response to circumstances in international
politics when preventative measures have failed and action is
needed to stop a situation spiralling, has become essential to
achieving and maintaining national security. In the aftermath of
the Iraq war this decision process has acquired even greater
significance. Marc Houben offers a comparative analysis of the
preconditions and constraints nine European states place on their
participation in international crisis management operations and the
important consequences of such decisions. The book provides a
theoretical framework to help the reader understand this complex
decision-making process.
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