The End of the Post-War Era

The End of the Post-War Era
Cornelia Navari
Looking for an inspection copy?
Please email academicmarketing@cambridge.edu.au to enquire about an inspection copy of this book.
AUD$91.95
inc GSTBetween the Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia in 1968 and the singing of the Helinski accords in August 1975, major changes occurred in the condition of the East-West conflict and more generally in the structure of great-power relations which had been built up since the end of the Second World War. This collection of documents, which includes the main speeches, treaties and agreements concluded between these two events, has been designed to illustrate the nature of these changes. The volume if prefaced by an analytical essay by the editors, and is subsequently divided into six sections. The first four deal respectively with the final ending of the cold war through the resolution of the problem of the two Germanies; the ending of the Vietnam War and the formal entry of the People's Republic of China into the international system; the diplomacy of detente between the super-powers and in Europe; and changes within the Western Alliance involving both NATO and the EEC, and in the Warsaw Pact.
Product details
November 2008Paperback
9780521089678
664 pages
229 × 152 × 37 mm
0.96kg
Available
Often bought together
The Cambridge History of China
: 14. The People's Republic
: 1. The Emergence of Revolutionary China, 1949–1965
: Hardback
The Cambridge History of China
: 15. The People's Republic
: 2. Revolutions within the Chinese Revolution, 1966–1982
: Hardback
1968: The World Transformed
: Paperback
Often bought together
This title is available for institutional purchase via Cambridge Core
Learn more
Related Journals
International Organization
: Journal
International Organization is a leading peer-reviewed journal that covers the entire field of international affairs. Subject areas include: foreign policies, international relations, international and comparative political economy, security policies, environmental disputes and resolutions, European integration, alliance patterns and war, bargaining and conflict resolution, economic development and adjustment, and international capital movements. The Robert O. Keohane AwardThe Robert O. Keohane award acknowledges Keohane's years of service to IO and support of junior scholars. The 500-dollar award will be presented annually for the best research article in IO written by an untenured scholar.
European Political Science Review
: Journal
The European Political Science Review (EPSR) publishes high quality scholarly research in political science, focusing on the most important debates in the discipline and demonstrating the highest possible standards in conceptualisation, theorisation and methodology. Submissions should emphasise why they are of interest to a broad readership across sub-disciplines and should engage with central theoretical debates in political science.EPSR welcomes empirical papers based on either qualitative or quantitative methodologies. These papers should be placed in the context of larger (theoretical) debates in the discipline. EPSR also welcomes conceptual and theoretical papers as well as contributions from the field of normative political theory.EPSR is not concerned solely with European political issues nor is it conceived as exclusively for European scholars. Submissions dealing with global issues and non-European topics are very much welcome.
Ethics & International Affairs
: Journal
The aim of Ethics & International Affairs, the journal of the Carnegie Council, is to help close the gap between theory and practice (and between theorists and practitioners) by publishing original essays that integrate rigorous thinking about principles of justice and morality into discussions of practical dilemmas related to current policy developments, global institutional arrangements, and the conduct of important international actors. Theoretical discussions that originate in philosophy, religion, or the social sciences should connect with the interests of journalists, activists, policy-makers, and citizens who are primarily concerned with assessing and reforming specific policies, as well as existing rules and institutions such as the United Nations, the World Bank, and the International Monetary Fund; arrangements governing trade, environmental protection, and the use of force; and the International Criminal Court and ad hoc tribunals that address genocide and past societal injustices.
European Journal of International Security
: Journal
NEW IN 2016 - The European Journal of International Security (EJIS) publishes theoretical, methodological and empirical papers at the cutting-edge of security research. Welcoming high quality research from around the world, EJIS covers all areas of international security, including: conflict and peacebuilding; strategy and warfare; environmental and food security; economic and energy security; human and everyday security; technology and security; and security governance. The journal is particularly concerned to make connections and build bridges, both between different disciplinary and theoretical perspectives, but also across regional boundaries.EJIS publishes rigorous, peer-reviewed papers that significantly advance scholarship through original analysis of a salient policy issue, the exploitation of new data, and/or the innovative development and application of theory. In addition to EJIS is also home to occasional high-impact special issues and an annual book review symposium, as well as hosting a regular Junior-Senior dialogue section.The first issue of EJIS was published in February 2016. For all enquiries relating to the journal please contact the Editor, Timothy Edmunds - tim.edmunds@bristol.ac.uk
Related Journals
Also by this Author
AUD$59.95 inc GST
AUD$59.95 inc GST
AUD$209.95 inc GST
Also by this Author
Table of Contents
- Preface
- Source Abbreviations
- Note on the texts of the documents
- Introduction
- 1. The end of the cold war
- 2. The diplomacy of detente
- 3. Changes in the western alliance
- 4. The Warsaw treaty organisation
- 5. The great powers and the middle east war of October 1973
- 6. The crisis of the international economic order.
- James Mayall
- Cornelia Navari
Editors
Browse by related subject
- African American history
- African history
- American history 1861-1900
- American history after 1945
- American history: general interest
- Atlantic history
- Australian history
- British history 1066-1450
- British history after 1450
- British history before 1066
- British history: general interest
- Colonial American history
- Cross-discipline history: general interest
- Diplomatic and international history
- Early republic and antebellum history
- East Asian history
- Economic history
- Environmental history
- European history 1000-1450
- European history 450-1000
- European history after 1450
- European history: general interest
- Gender history
- Global history
- Historical theory, historical method and historiography
- History after 1945 (general)
- History of ideas and intellectual history
- History of medicine
- History of native American peoples
- History of science and technology
- History of science: general interest
- Irish history
- Latin American history
- Middle East history
- Military history
- Regional and world history: general interest
- Regional history after 1500
- Regional history before 1500
- Russian and east European history
- Social and population history
- South Asian history
- South-east Asian history
- Twentieth century American history
- Twentieth century British history
- Twentieth century European history
- Twentieth century regional history