Power and InterdependenceLongman, 2001 - 334 Seiten Suitable for undergraduate courses in International Relations. This landmark text, an original work by two of the most renowned scholars in the field, continues to offer a rich theoretical approach to understanding contemporary world politics and valid general prescriptions for policy. Power and Interdependence was written to construct a way of looking at the world of politics that helps us understand the relationships between economics and politics, and patterns of institutionalized international cooperation, while retaining key realist insights about the roles that power and interests play in world politics. The new Third Edition has been thoroughly updated to include analyses of the effects of new technologies and growing globalism on power and interdependence in today's world. *New - Chapter 9 Power, Interdependence, and the Information Age presents the reader with important new information about the effects of new technologies on world politics and power and interdependence. *New - Chapter 10 Power, Interdependence & Globalism presents the reader with important new information about the effects of globalism on world politics and power and interdependence. |
Inhalt
INTERDEPENDENCE IN WORLD POLITICS | 3 |
REALISM AND COMPLEX INTERDEPENDENCE | 20 |
EXPLAINING INTERNATIONAL REGIME CHANGE | 33 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
action agenda agreement American analysis Australia bargaining Bretton Woods regime Britain Canada Canadian Canadian-American channels of contact Chapter Charles Kindleberger Cold War complex interdependence conditions of complex Conference conflicts cooperation costs countries developed domestic politics dominant effects exchange rates explain foreign policy free seas globalism goals gold standard governments hegemony important increased information revolution institutions interests International Monetary Fund international monetary system international organization model international politics international regimes involved issue structure Japan jurisdiction Keohane leadership less linkage major markets military force military power naval networks nomic norms nuclear oceans issue area oceans space outcomes overall structure model patterns percent period political processes politicization postwar Power and Interdependence power resources power structure realist regime change relations relationship role rules sensitivity social soft power Soviet Union theory threat tional tions trade transgovernmental transnational actors University Press vulnerability world politics World War II York

