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Small and developing states make up the majority of participants in
United Nations Peacekeeping Operations (UNPKO), and Malaysia is one
of these. The numerous previous studies on Malaysia's UNPKO are
primarily historical narratives which focus on practical,
policy-related issues and due process, making no attempt to
synchronize the nexus between theory and policy analysis. Nor do
they cover the theoretical aspect which can operationalize and
address the question of the roles played by Malaysia's domestic
actors (foreign policy executives, legislature, military, media,
public opinion) in the respective decision-making processes as well
as those of external level, such as international power politics
and geopolitical considerations. In other words, they are
predominantly a historical narrative of only several Malaysia's
UNPKO. This book fills the critical gap. It deliberates on the
respective national and international decision-making processes,
especially from the Malaysian point of view, and analyses the
theoretical and practical impacts of Malaysia's UNPKO in
understanding international politics. Apart from providing a
well-researched account of Malaysia's UNPKO across the globe for 50
years, i.e. 1960-2010, this book examines the determinants by using
qualitative data, particularly key-informant interviews and
documentary analysis. Thus, while most studies of Malaysia's UNPKO
single out domestic imperatives as the most vital determinant, this
book, on the contrary, comprehensively identifies the prevailing
world security order as the most important determinant influencing
Malaysia's UNPKO, followed by the domestic ones.
Small and developing states make up the majority of participants in
United Nations Peacekeeping Operations (UNPKO), and Malaysia is one
of these. The numerous previous studies on Malaysia's UNPKO are
primarily historical narratives which focus on practical,
policy-related issues and due process, making no attempt to
synchronize the nexus between theory and policy analysis. Nor do
they cover the theoretical aspect which can operationalize and
address the question of the roles played by Malaysia's domestic
actors (foreign policy executives, legislature, military, media,
public opinion) in the respective decision-making processes as well
as those of external level, such as international power politics
and geopolitical considerations. In other words, they are
predominantly a historical narrative of only several Malaysia's
UNPKO. This book fills the critical gap. It deliberates on the
respective national and international decision-making processes,
especially from the Malaysian point of view, and analyses the
theoretical and practical impacts of Malaysia's UNPKO in
understanding international politics. Apart from providing a
well-researched account of Malaysia's UNPKO across the globe for 50
years, i.e. 1960-2010, this book examines the determinants by using
qualitative data, particularly key-informant interviews and
documentary analysis. Thus, while most studies of Malaysia's UNPKO
single out domestic imperatives as the most vital determinant, this
book, on the contrary, comprehensively identifies the prevailing
world security order as the most important determinant influencing
Malaysia's UNPKO, followed by the domestic ones.
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