Regions and powers : the structure of international security /
Buzan and Wæver argue that in the post-Cold War world regional patterns of security are more important than ever before. Analysing regions throughout the world, this original and comprehensive study offers a distinctive interpretation of the nature of the 'new world security order' that ha...
| Call Number: | Libro Electrónico |
|---|---|
| Main Author: | |
| Other Authors: | |
| Format: | Electronic eBook |
| Language: | Inglés |
| Published: |
Cambridge :
Cambridge University Press,
2003.
©2003 |
| Series: | Cambridge studies in international relations ;
91. |
| Subjects: | |
| Online Access: | Texto completo |
Table of Contents:
- Theories and histories about the structure of contemporary international security
- Levels : distinguishing the regional from the global
- Security complexes : a theory of regional security
- South Asia : inching towards internal and external transformation
- Northeast and Southeast Asian RSCs during the Cold War
- The 1990s and beyond : an emergent EastAsian complex
- The Middle East : a perennial conflict formation
- Sub-Saharan Africa : security dynamics in a setting of weak and failed states
- Conclusions
- North America : the sole superpower and its surroundings
- South America : an under-conflictual anomaly?
- EU-Europe : the European Union and its 'near abroad'
- The Balkans and Turkey
- The post-Soviet space : a regional security complex
- Conclusions : scenarios for the European supercomplex
- Regions and powers : summing up and looking ahead
- Reflections on conceptualising international security.


