International Politics: A Framework for Analysis |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 43
Page 194
... settlement in such conditions are involved . First , one party must get the other to want an agreement of some sort ; he must somehow make the other realize that any agreement or settlement is preferable to the status quo of ...
... settlement in such conditions are involved . First , one party must get the other to want an agreement of some sort ; he must somehow make the other realize that any agreement or settlement is preferable to the status quo of ...
Page 461
... settlement seriously until a military stalemate had developed . As long as any party believed it could achieve its objectives , even if slightly altered because of strong resistance , settlement was not likely . The anticipation of ...
... settlement seriously until a military stalemate had developed . As long as any party believed it could achieve its objectives , even if slightly altered because of strong resistance , settlement was not likely . The anticipation of ...
Page 469
... settlement reached through the various settlement procedures , the history of the League in fulfilling these commitments was disappointing . In 1921 three Scandinavian states introduced a resolution which proposed that each member of ...
... settlement reached through the various settlement procedures , the history of the League in fulfilling these commitments was disappointing . In 1921 three Scandinavian states introduced a resolution which proposed that each member of ...
Contents
The Development of International Relations as a Field of Study | 6 |
Current Schools of Study in International Politics 8 Interdisciplinary Efforts | 13 |
International Politics Foreign Policy and International Relations | 20 |
Copyright | |
49 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
abroad achieve actions activities affairs agreement alliance allies American areas arms attempts attitudes bargaining become behavior bloc century China city-states commitments communication Communist concerned conflict considerable countries create crisis decisions defense diplomacy diplomatic direct discussion domestic economic effective established Europe European example external force foreign policy formal forms German goals groups important increase independent influence interests international politics involved issues Italy leaders less limited major means ment MICHIGAN military needs negotiations nuclear objectives observed officials opinion organizations parties peace period policy makers position principles problems processes programs propaganda relations relationship response result role rules situation social sources Soviet Union strategy structure successful techniques territory threat tion trade traditional treaties types United United Nations University Press values various weapons Western York