|
Showing 1 - 10 of
10 matches in All Departments
This book describes how the United States can integrate religious
considerations into its foreign policy, moving towards a new
leadership paradigm that effectively counters the challenge of
Islamist extremism. How should the United States deal with the
jihadist challenge and other religious imperatives that permeate
today's geopolitical landscape? Religion, Terror, and Error: U.S.
Foreign Policy and the Challenge of Spiritual Engagement argues
that what is required is a longer-term strategy of cultural
engagement, backed by a deeper understanding of how others view the
world and what is important to them. The means by which that can be
accomplished are the subject of this book. This work achieves three
important goals. It shows how religious considerations can be
incorporated into the practice of U.S. foreign policy; offers a
successor to the rational-actor model of decision-making that has
heretofore excluded "irrational" factors like religion; and
suggests a new paradigm for U.S. leadership in anticipation of
tomorrow's multipolar world. In describing how the United States
should realign itself to deal more effectively with the causal
factors that underlying religious extremism, this innovative
treatise explains how existing capabilities can be redirected to
respond to the challenge and identifies additional capabilities
that will be needed to complete the task. A foreword by retired
Marine Corps General Anthony Zinni, former Commander-in-Chief of
the U.S. Central Command, U.S. Special Envoy to the Middle East,
and member of the CSIS Smart Power Commission Maps that show areas
of interest discussed in the text Epigraphs throughout the book to
provide amplification of important insights
Political economies of landscape change contributes to the
Landscape Architecture Foundation's Landscape Futures Initiative,
which explores driving forces of landscape change that societies
and designers will face in the 21st century. It examines the
complex relationships between political economy and landscape
change and encompasses perspectives ranging from radical landscape
interpretation to sustainable livelihoods, real estate economics,
institutions, international landscape policies, and global finance.
It asks what difference design can make within the broader
structural contexts of landscape change.
"Places of Power: Political Economies of Landscape Change" asks
how politics and economics transform the landscapes we inhabit.
This volume explores the connections between political economy and
landscape change through a series of conceptual essays and case
studies. In so doing, it speaks to a broad readership of landscape
architects, geographers, and related fields of social and
environmental research. The book consists of an introductory essay
with nine chapters commissioned from leading geographers, landscape
architects, political scientists, and economists, and a concluding
essay on implications for future landscape inquiry and design.
The book is organized in three major sections. Part one, titled
Landscapes of Struggle, Possibility, and Prosperity, includes a
chapter on new axioms for reading the landscape followed by two
chapters that read processes of economic development and distress
in mountain landscapes of the U.S. and South America. Part Two on
Political and Economic Driving Forces of Landscape Change includes
two chapters each on political driving forces (political constructs
and institutions) and economic driving forces (environmental
economics and global financial markets). Part Three, titled
Integrative Landscape Change compares innovative rural landscape
policies in Europe and the U.S., and draws implications for future
landscape inquiry, planning, and design.
The continued exclusion of religious considerations from the diplomatic enterprise contributes to the inability to communicate across the divide that currently separates the religious world of Islam and the quasi-seculr world of the West. The same holds true of other hotspots around the globe where religion plays a key role in ongoing conflicts. This book suggests a way to bridge the gap by means of a "faith-based diplomacy" that blends religious insights and influence with the practice of international politics. This activity, say the authors, cannot be controlled by governments - their political agendas would compromise the integrity of such initiatives - but it is something they can reinforce and build upon to good effect in the right circumstances. After presenting this argument, the book goes on to offer close analyses of five of the world's most intractable conflicts (Sri Lanka, Bosnia, Sudan, Kashmir, and Israel/Palestine) in which the authors attempt to establish guideposts that can help point the way for faith-based intervention in these troubled places. Faith-Based Diplomacy will function as a sequel to Douglas Johnston's groundbreaking collection Religion, the Mission Dimension of Statecraft, which pioneered the study of the role of the religion in conflict resolution.
The role of religion in foreign policy debates, while never absent,
has often been sidelined by popular prejudices and secular demands.
The religious resurgence in America and the threat of extremist
terrorism abroad have paved the way for a renewed recognition of
the necessity of careful and candid dialogue about religion's place
in international affairs. In recent years, scholars, practitioners,
and policymakers have consistently reflected upon the role of
religion in foreign policy, resulting in a vast, rich array of
resources important for moving forward in an increasingly
pluralistic world. Dennis Hoover and Douglas Johnston here present
the writings of leading scholars, revealing distinctive approaches
to religion and global politics. Religion and Foreign Affairs
offers readers a broad selection of essays, ranging across cultures
and worldviews. From the ethics of force and peacemaking to
globalization and American foreign policy, this compendium provides
a solid introduction to the field of religion and foreign affairs
that will stimulate discussion and encourage intelligent practice.
This is the last of three volumes dealing with the International
Legal Environment (see list in back of book), included in the
Collected Research Studies of the Royal Commission on the Economic
Union and Development Prospects for Canada. The Third United
Nations Conference on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS 3) culminated in
the adopted of the United Nations convention on the law of the sea
in 1982. Since then 150 countries, including Canada, have signed
this historic treaty. It affects Canada's four major ocean
industries: fishing, offshore petroleum, shipping and ocean mining.
As Canada contemplates ratification of this agreement, it must
consider these as well as several other maritime matters, including
transit management, offshore development, marine-technology
development and ocean-science policy. This volume delineates the
issues and their implications for Canada's future at sea, and
recommends the establishment of an independent advisory body to
ensure serious and comprehensive treatment of maritime concerns.
This co-operative venture by thirty-eight leading Canadian lawyers,
jurists, and scholars is the first published survey on a major
scale to cover nearly all aspects of Canadian relations with
international organization. In recent years active Canadian
involvement in controversies exercising major intergovernmental
organizations and raising complex questions of international law
has burgeoned to the point that Canada's role often far exceeds
what might normally be expected of a middle power with a limited
population. In some cases Canada has taken a leading part
comparable to the major powers. This Canadian activity, variously
applauded as creative or rejected as dangerous, is reviewed and
assessed in these pages. More than a factual recitation of events,
this volume attempts to explain why the Candian approach developed
as it did and what factors, or patterns, are exerting perceivable
influences on the prsent shaping of policy. Unusual in the vast
scopt of the subject matter, the work covers such topics as: the
constitution and functioning of international organizations; this
relations of individuals and corporations with states other than
those of which they are nationals; multinational corporations;
control of the extraterritorial activities of individuals and
corporations; pollution of the air, the fresh waters, and the
ocean; the sea bed, the continental shelf, and the conservation of
the fisheries. This volume is impressive recognition of the work
done by Canadian lawyers in contributing during recent years to
questions of jurisprudence among the nations of the world.
|
You may like...
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R383
R310
Discovery Miles 3 100
|