During the Cold War, most international relations theorists and
strategic studies analysts paid little attention to ethnic and
other forms of communal conflict. Disregard for the importance of
ethnic and nationality issues in world affairs, always misguided so
far as the developing world was concerned, has been overtaken, in
stunning fashion, by recent events from Abkhazia to Zaire. The
essays in this volume advance our understanding of the causes of
ethnic and communal conflict, the regional and international
implications of such conflicts, and what the international
community can do to minimize the potential for instability and
violence. Drawn from recent issues of "Survival," they are
organized along thematic rather than regional lines, and will be
required reading for scholars, students, and policymakers
alike.
The contributors to the volume include Michael Brown on the
causes and implications of ethnic conflict, Anthony Smith on the
ethnic sources of nationalism, David Welsh on domestic politics and
ethnic conflict, Renee de Nevers on democratization and ethnic
conflict, and Pierre Hassner on nationalism and internationalism.
Jack Snyder writes on nationalism and the crisis of the post-Soviet
state, Barry Posen on the security dilemma and ethnic conflict,
Kathleen Newland on ethnic conflict and refugees, Jenonne Walker on
international mediation of ethnic conflicts, and Robert Cooper and
Mats Berdal on outside intervention in ethnic conflicts, Adam
Roberts discusses the U.N. and international security, and John
Chipman explores managing the politics of parochialism."
General
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