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This book brings together recent research on the end of the Cold
War in the Third World and engages with ongoing debates about
regional conflicts, the role of great powers in the developing
world, and the role of international actors in conflict resolution.
Most of the recent scholarship on the end of the Cold War has
focused on Europe or bilateral US-Soviet relations. By contrast,
relatively little has been written on the end of the Cold War in
the Third World: in Asia, Africa, and Latin America. How did the
great transformation of the world in the late 1980s affect regional
conflicts and client relationships? Who "won" and who "lost" in the
Third World and why do so many Cold War-era problems remain
unresolved? This book brings to light for the first time evidence
from newly declassified archives in Russia, the United States,
Eastern Europe, as well as from private collections, recent memoirs
and interviews with key participants. It goes further than anything
published so far in systematically explaining, both from the
perspectives of the superpowers and the Third World countries, what
the end of bipolarity meant not only for the underdeveloped
periphery so long enmeshed in ideological, socio-political and
military conflicts sponsored by Washington, Moscow or Beijing, but
also for the broader patterns of international relations. This book
will be of much interest to students of the Cold War, war and
conflict studies, third world and development studies,
international history, and IR in general.
This book brings together recent research on the end of the Cold
War in the Third World and engages with ongoing debates about
regional conflicts, the role of great powers in the developing
world, and the role of international actors in conflict resolution.
Most of the recent scholarship on the end of the Cold War has
focused on Europe or bilateral US-Soviet relations. By contrast,
relatively little has been written on the end of the Cold War in
the Third World: in Asia, Africa, and Latin America. How did the
great transformation of the world in the late 1980s affect regional
conflicts and client relationships? Who "won" and who "lost" in the
Third World and why do so many Cold War-era problems remain
unresolved? This book brings to light for the first time evidence
from newly declassified archives in Russia, the United States,
Eastern Europe, as well as from private collections, recent memoirs
and interviews with key participants. It goes further than anything
published so far in systematically explaining, both from the
perspectives of the superpowers and the Third World countries, what
the end of bipolarity meant not only for the underdeveloped
periphery so long enmeshed in ideological, socio-political and
military conflicts sponsored by Washington, Moscow or Beijing, but
also for the broader patterns of international relations. This book
will be of much interest to students of the Cold War, war and
conflict studies, third world and development studies,
international history, and IR in general.
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