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E-raamat: Powers and Principles: International Leadership in a Shrinking World

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  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 16-May-2009
  • Kirjastus: Lexington Books
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780739135457
  • Formaat - PDF+DRM
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  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 16-May-2009
  • Kirjastus: Lexington Books
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780739135457

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What if the major global and regional powers of todays world came into closer alignment to build a stronger international community and shared approaches to twenty-first century threats and challenges? The Stanley Foundation posed that question to thirty-three top foreign policy analysts in Powers and Principles: International Leadership in a Shrinking World. Contributing writers were asked to describe the paths that nine powerful nations, a regional union of twenty-seven states, and a multinational corporation could take as constructive stakeholders in a strengthened rules-based international order. Each chapter is an assessment of what is politically possible (and impossible)with a description of the associated pressures and reference to the countrys geostrategic position, economy, society, history, and political system and culture. To provide a perspective from the inside and counterweight, each essay is accompanied by a critical reaction by a prominent analyst commentator from the given country. Powers and Principles is aimed at both reflective practitioners of policy and policy-relevant scholars.

Arvustused

The distinct lack of agreement among major powers today contradicts the idea of an international community bound by a common moral code. International norms nonetheless exert a degree of moral and political force as powerful nations vie for status and influence. Powers and Principles uses a novel and illuminating approach to examine the role of benevolent impulses in international affairs. -- Robert Kagan, author of The Return of History and the End of Dreams and Of Paradise and Power: America and Europe in the New World Order. If the world of the 21st century is to be governed, and its daunting challenges addressed, the great powers will need to step forward to provide collective leadership. At the same time, this modern concert of powers must also be expanded to including rising states and new global stakeholders. Powers and Principles provides one of the best glimpses of these major players and their agendas. It offers an illuminating survey of the competing visions of global order and the terms upon which constructive order building might be based. -- G. John Ikenberry, Princeton University

Acknowledgments vii
Introduction 1(10)
Part 1 Old Guard
A Stake in the System: Redefining American Leadership
11(34)
Suzanne Nossel
David Shorr
Nikolas Gvosdev
Japan: Leading or Losing the Way Toward Responsible Stakeholdership?
45(28)
Steven Clemons
Weston S. Konishi
Masaru Tamamoto
Rue de la Loi: The Global Ambition of the European Project
73(92)
Ronald D. Asmus
Tod Lindberg
Robert Cooper
Part 2 Challengers
A Rising China's Rising Responsibilities
Bates Gill
Michael Schiffer
Wu Xinbo
India: The Ultimate Test of Free-Market Democracy
Barbara Crossette
George Perkovich
C. Raja Mohan
Russia's Place in an Unsettled Order: Calculations in the Kremlin
165(32)
Andrew Kuchins
Richard Weitz
Dmitri Trenin
Part 3 Bellwethers
Turkey's Identity and Strategy: A Game of Three-Dimensional Chess
197(28)
Zeyno Baran
Ian O. Lesser
Huseyin Bagci
Brazil's Candidacy for Major Power Status
225(34)
Paulo Roberto de Almeida
Miguel Diaz
Georges D. Landau
Part 4 Square Pegs
South Africa: From Beacon of Hope to Rogue Democracy?
259(36)
Pauline H. Baker
Princeton N. Lyman
Khehla Shubane
Refashioning Iran's International Role
295(26)
Suzanne Maloney
Ray Takeyh
Omid Memarian
Laggards on Responsibility: The Oil Majors
321(28)
Susan Ariel Aaronon
David Deese
Edward C. Chow
Index 349(12)
About the Contributors 361
Michael Schiffer was, from 2006-2009, a program officer in policy analysis and dialogue at the Stanley Foundation and a fellow at the Center for Asia and Pacific Studies at the University of Iowa. David Shorr is a program officer at the Stanley Foundation. His last co-edited volume, a collection of bipartisan essays, was Bridging the Foreign Policy Divide.