ABSTRACT
Reflecting the profound changes in international society in the past decade and the challenges that all Powers’ diplomacy and statecraft face, whether opposing or encouraging these changes, this fully revised and updated edition provides a unique multifaceted assessment by experts of the new international order.
Built around the thesis that Great Power rivalry dominated after the end of the Cold War, it examines how this multi-polarity has become more extreme. The Handbook assesses the diplomacy and statecraft of individual powers in seven key sections:
• The Context of Diplomacy
• The Great Powers
• Middle Powers
• Developing Powers
• International Organisations and Military Alliances
• The International Economy
• Issues of Conflict and Co-operation
It shows how diplomacy and statecraft have transformed on issues such as the evolving "America First" strategy; the strengthening of the People’s Republic of China; the growth of non-state actors in foreign policy; the unravelling of international arms control agreements; the aggressive nature of Russian foreign policy; and the emergence of major armed conflicts and the rise of terrorism and armed insurgencies around the world.
It will be of interest to government and non-governmental actors, established scholars and students in the fields of international relations, history, and military studies.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part I|26 pages
The Context of Diplomacy
part II|89 pages
The Great Powers
chapter 3|17 pages
Imperial Recessional
part III|65 pages
Middle Powers
chapter 13|12 pages
Austria's Foreign Policy in the Early Twenty-First Century
part IV|50 pages
Developing Powers
part V|47 pages
International Organisations and Military Alliances
part VI|61 pages
The International Economy
chapter 23|11 pages
The International Monetary Fund and the World Bank
chapter 26|9 pages
The Globalised International Economy
part VII|88 pages
Issues of Conflict and Co-operation