This new textbook provides students with an accessible overview
of the logic, evolution, application and outcomes of the five major
approaches of the growing field of international conflict
management:
- traditional peacekeeping
- peace enforcement and support operations
- negotiation and bargaining
- mediation
- adjudication.
The book aims to provide the student with a fuller understanding
of the strengths and weaknesses of these five techniques within the
dynamic context of the contemporary security environment,
especially in relation to recent and ongoing case studies of
inter-state and intra-state conflict. To demonstrate the changing
nature of security in the post-Cold War world, the text contrasts
this with competing visions of security during the Cold War and
earlier periods, and provides numerous points of comparison with
the dominant causes, types, strategy, and prosecution of warfare in
other eras.
International Conflict Management will be essential reading for
all students of conflict management, mediation, peacekeeping, peace
and conflict studies, and international security in general.
Michael J. Butler is an Assistant Professor in the Department of
Government and International Relations at Clark University
(USA).
General
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