ABSTRACT

The past half-century has seen many hopes raised and some dashed, a succession of fears and false alarms, and both triumphs and calamities that were almost entirely unexpected. This work offers a short but sweeping history of world politics since 1945: America's postwar pre-eminence and the hopes that attended the creation of the United Nations; the Cold War and the emergence of a volatile Third World; economic transformations and the twin threat of nuclear and ecological disaster; the crumbling of the Soviet system and the short-lived promise of a peaceful, prosperous and democratic new world. The author describes these momentous changes concisely in an effort to show how we got here from there and what we might have learned along the way.

chapter |4 pages

Introduction: Fifty Years of Change

part I|34 pages

Introduction: The World that Emerged in 1945

part II|138 pages

The World of the 1950s and the 1960s: A Bipolar Structure and a Third World Challenge

chapter 2|29 pages

The Development of the Bipolar World

chapter 3|24 pages

Bipolarism Challenged—Within the Blocs

chapter 5|32 pages

The Cold War in the 1960s and Beyond

part III|38 pages

Global Politics

chapter 7|36 pages

Toward a Politics of the Planet Earth

part IV|60 pages

The End of the Cold War

chapter 8|29 pages

The Collapse of the Communist World

chapter 9|29 pages

“The Winner”

part V|78 pages

Three-Quarters of the World

chapter 11|14 pages

Asia and the Pacific

chapter 12|16 pages

The Middle East and the Persian Gulf

chapter 13|20 pages

Africa and Latin America

chapter V|12 pages

Conclusion