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Shocks and Rivalries in the Middle East and North Africa is the
first book to examine issue-driven antagonisms within groups of
Middle East and North Africa (MENA) states and their impact on
relations within the region. The volume also considers how shock
events, such as internal revolts and regional wars, can alter
interstate tensions and the trajectory of conflict. MENA has
experienced more internal rivalries than any other region, making a
detailed analysis vital to understanding the region's complex
political, cultural, and economic history. The state groupings
studied in this volume include Israel and Iran; Iran and Saudi
Arabia; Iran and Turkey; Iran, Iraq, and Syria; Egypt and Saudi
Arabia; and Algeria and Morocco. Essays are theoretically driven,
breaking the MENA region down into a collection of systems that
exemplify how state and nonstate actors interact around certain
issues. Through this approach, contributors shed rare light on the
origins, persistence, escalation, and resolution of MENA rivalries
and trace significant patterns of regional change. Shocks and
Rivalries in the Middle East and North Africa makes a major
contribution to scholarship on MENA antagonisms. It not only
addresses an understudied phenomenon in the international relations
of the MENA region, it also expands our knowledge of rivalry
dynamics in global politics.
Shocks and Rivalries in the Middle East and North Africa is the
first book to examine issue-driven antagonisms within groups of
Middle East and North Africa (MENA) states and their impact on
relations within the region. The volume also considers how shock
events, such as internal revolts and regional wars, can alter
interstate tensions and the trajectory of conflict. MENA has
experienced more internal rivalries than any other region, making a
detailed analysis vital to understanding the region's complex
political, cultural, and economic history. The state groupings
studied in this volume include Israel and Iran; Iran and Saudi
Arabia; Iran and Turkey; Iran, Iraq, and Syria; Egypt and Saudi
Arabia; and Algeria and Morocco. Essays are theoretically driven,
breaking the MENA region down into a collection of systems that
exemplify how state and nonstate actors interact around certain
issues. Through this approach, contributors shed rare light on the
origins, persistence, escalation, and resolution of MENA rivalries
and trace significant patterns of regional change. Shocks and
Rivalries in the Middle East and North Africa makes a major
contribution to scholarship on MENA antagonisms. It not only
addresses an understudied phenomenon in the international relations
of the MENA region, it also expands our knowledge of rivalry
dynamics in global politics.
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Regions, Power, and Conflict - Constrained Capabilities, Hierarchy, and Rivalry (Hardcover, 1st ed. 2022)
William R. Thompson, Thomas J. Volgy, Paul Bezerra, Jacob Cramer, Kelly Marie Gordell, …
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R3,659
Discovery Miles 36 590
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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The three main levels of analysis in international relations have
been the systemic, the national, and the individual. A fourth level
that falls between the systemic and the national is the region. It
is woefully underdeveloped in comparison to the attention afforded
the other three. Yet regions tend to be distinctive theaters for
international politics. Otherwise, we would not recognize that
Middle Eastern interstate politics somehow does not resemble Latin
American interstate politics or interstate politics in Southern
Africa (although once the Middle East and Southern Africa may have
seemed more similar in their mutual fixation with opposition to
domestic policies in Israel and South Africa, respectively). This
book, divided into three parts, first makes a case for studying
regional politics even though it must also be appreciated that
regional boundaries are also hazy and not always easy to pin down
empirically. The second part examines power distributions within
regions as an important entry point to studying regional
similarities and differences. Two emphases are stressed. One is
that regional power assessments need to be conditioned by
controlling for weak states which are more common in some regions
than they are in others. The other emphasis is on regional power
hierarchies. Some regions have strong regional hierarchies while
others do not. Regions with strong hierarchies operate much
differently from those without them in the sense that the former
are more pacific than the latter. The third part of the book
focuses on regional differences in terms of conflict behavior,
order preferences, rivalries, and rivalry termination.
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