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Conflict After the Cold War

Book

Conflict After the Cold War

DOI link for Conflict After the Cold War

Conflict After the Cold War book

Arguments on Causes of War and Peace

Conflict After the Cold War

DOI link for Conflict After the Cold War

Conflict After the Cold War book

Arguments on Causes of War and Peace
ByRichard K. Betts
Edition 5th Edition
First Published 2017
eBook Published 6 April 2017
Pub. Location New York
Imprint Routledge
DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315231372
Pages 682
eBook ISBN 9781315231372
Subjects Humanities, Politics & International Relations
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Betts, R.K. (2017). Conflict After the Cold War: Arguments on Causes of War and Peace (5th ed.). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315231372

ABSTRACT

Edited by one of the most renowned scholars in the field, Richard Betts' Conflict After the Cold War assembles classic and contemporary readings on enduring problems of international security. Offering broad historical and philosophical breadth, the carefully chosen and excerpted selections in this popular reader help students engage key debates over the future of war and the new forms that violent conflict will take. Conflict After the Cold War encourages closer scrutiny of the political, economic, social, and military factors that drive war and peace.

New to the Fifth Edition:

  • Original introductions to each of 10 major parts as well as to the book as a whole have been updated by the author.
  • An entirely new section (Part IX) on "Threat Assessment and Misjudgment" explores fundamental problems in diagnosing danger, understanding strategic choices, and measuring costs against benefits in wars over limited stakes.
  • 12 new readings have been added or revised:

Fred C. Iklé, "The Dark Side of Progress"

G. John Ikenberry, "China’s Choice"

Kenneth N. Waltz, "Why Nuclear Proliferation May Be Good"

Daniel Byman, "Drones: Technology Serves Strategy"

Audrey Kurth Cronin, "Drones: Tactics Undermine Strategy"

Eyre Crowe and Thomas Sanderson, "The German Threat? 1907"

Neville Henderson, "The German Threat? 1938"

Vladimir Putin, "The Threat to Ukraine from the West"

Eliot A. Cohen, "The Russian Threat"

James C. Thomson, Jr., "How Could Vietnam Happen? An Autopsy"

Stephen Biddle, "Afghanistan’s Legacy"

Martin C. Libicki, "Why Cyberdeterrence is Different"

TABLE OF CONTENTS

part I|66 pages

Visions of Conflict and Peace

chapter |12 pages

Reading 1.1 The End of History?

ByFrancis Fukuyama

chapter |17 pages

Reading 1.2 Why We Will Soon Miss the Cold War

ByJohn J. Mearsheimer

chapter |20 pages

Reading 1.3 The Clash of Civilizations?

BySamuel P. Huntington

chapter |12 pages

Reading 1.4 Economics Trumps Politics

ByFareed Zakaria

chapter |4 pages

Reading 1.5 The Dark Side of Progress

ByFred C. Iklé

part II|67 pages

International Realism: Anarchy and Power

chapter |6 pages

Reading 2.1 The Melian Dialogue

ByThucydides

chapter |5 pages

Reading 2.2 Doing Evil in Order to Do Good

ByNiccolò Machiavelli

chapter |5 pages

Reading 2.3 The State of Nature and the State of War

ByThomas Hobbes

chapter |18 pages

Reading 2.4 Realism and Idealism

ByEdward Hallett Carr

chapter |8 pages

Reading 2.5 The Origins of War in Neorealist Theory

ByKenneth N. Waltz

chapter |14 pages

Reading 2.6 Hegemonic War and International Change

ByRobert Gilpin

chapter |13 pages

Reading 2.7 Power, Culprits, and Arms

ByGeoffrey Blainey

part III|53 pages

International Liberalism: Institutions and Cooperation

chapter |7 pages

Reading 3.1 Perpetual Peace

ByImmanuel Kant

chapter |4 pages

Reading 3.2 Peace Through Arbitration

ByRichard Cobden

chapter |4 pages

Reading 3.3 Community of Power vs. Balance of Power

ByWoodrow Wilson

chapter |16 pages

Reading 3.4 Liberalism and World Politics

ByMichael W. Doyle

chapter |8 pages

Reading 3.5 Power and Interdependence

ByRobert O. Keohane, Joseph S. Nye

chapter |13 pages

Reading 3.6 The Obsolescence of Major War

ByJohn Mueller

part IV|62 pages

Psychology and Culture: The Human Mind, Norms, and Learning

chapter |8 pages

Reading 4.1 Why War?

BySigmund Freud

chapter |8 pages

Reading 4.2 How Good People Do Bad Things

ByStanley Milgram

chapter |16 pages

Reading 4.3 War and Misperception

ByRobert Jervis

chapter |8 pages

Reading 4.4 Spirit, Standing, and Honor

ByRichard Ned Lebow

chapter |6 pages

Reading 4.5 Warfare Is Only an Invention—Not a Biological Necessity

ByMargaret Mead

chapter |14 pages

Reading 4.6 Men, Women, and War

ByJ. Ann Tickner

part V|78 pages

Economics: Interests and Interdependence

chapter |3 pages

Reading 5.1 Money Is Not the Sinews of War, Although It Is Generally So Considered

ByNiccolò Machiavelli

chapter |3 pages

Reading 5.2 The Great Illusion

ByNorman Angell

chapter |9 pages

Reading 5.3 Paradise Is a Bazaar

ByGeoffrey Blainey

chapter |8 pages

Reading 5.4 Imperialism, the Highest Stage of Capitalism

ByV. I. Lenin

chapter |10 pages

Reading 5.5 Imperialism and Capitalism

ByJoseph Schumpeter

chapter |13 pages

Reading 5.6 War as Policy

ByAlan S. Milward

chapter |10 pages

Reading 5.7 Structural Causes and Economic Effects

ByKenneth N. Waltz

chapter |14 pages

Reading 5.8 Trade and Power

ByRichard Rosecrance

chapter |10 pages

Reading 5.9 China’s Choice

ByG. John Ikenberry

part VI|57 pages

Politics: Ideology and Identity

chapter |14 pages

Reading 6.1 Democratization and War

ByEdward D. Mansfield, Jack Snyder

chapter |13 pages

Reading 6.2 Nations and Nationalism

ByErnest Gellner

chapter |19 pages

Reading 6.3 Possible and Impossible Solutions to Ethnic Civil Wars

ByChaim Kaufmann

chapter |9 pages

Reading 6.4 The Troubled History of Partition

ByRadha Kumar

part VII|59 pages

Military Technology, Strategy, and Stability

chapter |17 pages

Reading 7.1 Cooperation Under the Security Dilemma

ByRobert Jervis

chapter |14 pages

Reading 7.2 The Offensive/Defensive Balance of Military Technology

ByJack S. Levy

chapter |14 pages

Reading 7.3 Why Nuclear Proliferation May Be Good

ByKenneth N. Waltz

chapter |6 pages

Reading 7.4 Drones: Technology Serves Strategy

ByDaniel Byman

chapter |7 pages

Reading 7.5 Drones: Tactics Undermine Strategy

ByAudrey Kurth Cronin

part VIII|103 pages

Terrorism, Revolution, and Unconventional Warfare

chapter |14 pages

Reading 8.1 The Strategic Logic of Terrorism

ByMartha Crenshaw

chapter |5 pages

Reading 8.2 Speech to the American People

ByOsama Bin Ladin

chapter |10 pages

Reading 8.3 Science of Guerrilla Warfare

ByT. E. Lawrence

chapter |11 pages

Reading 8.4 On Guerrilla Warfare

ByMao Tse-Tung

chapter |26 pages

Reading 8.5 Patterns of Violence in World Politics

BySamuel P. Huntington

chapter |17 pages

Reading 8.6 Insurgency and Counterinsurgency

ByDavid Galula

chapter |8 pages

Reading 8.7 Principles, Imperatives, and Paradoxes of Counterinsurgency

ByEliot Cohen, Colonel Conrad Crane, Colonel Jan Horvath, Colonel John Nagl

chapter |13 pages

Reading 8.8 A Strategy of Tactics: The Folly of Counterinsurgency

ByColonel Gian P. Gentile

part IX|69 pages

Threat Assessment and Misjudgment: Recurrent Dilemmas

chapter |15 pages

Reading 9.1 The German Threat? 1907

ByEyre Crowe, Thomas Sanderson

chapter |5 pages

Reading 9.2 The German Threat? 1938

ByNeville Henderson

chapter |8 pages

Reading 9.3 The Threat to Ukraine From the West

ByVladimir Putin

chapter |7 pages

Reading 9.4 The Threat From Russia

ByEliot A. Cohen

chapter |11 pages

Reading 9.5 How Could Vietnam Happen? An Autopsy

ByJames C. Thomson

chapter |12 pages

Reading 9.6 Afghanistan’s Legacy: Emerging Lessons

ByStephen Biddle

chapter |13 pages

Reading 9.7 China: Can the Next Superpower Rise Without War?

ByRichard K. Betts, Thomas J. Christensen

part X|52 pages

New Threats and Strategies for Peace

chapter |15 pages

Reading 10.1 Environmental Changes as Causes of Acute Conflict

ByThomas F. Homer-Dixon

chapter |15 pages

Reading 10.2 Why Cyberdeterrence Is Different

ByMartin C. Libicki

chapter |6 pages

Reading 10.3 A World of Liberty Under Law

ByG. John Ikenberry, Anne-Marie Slaughter

chapter |13 pages

Reading 10.4 Peace Among Civilizations?

BySamuel P. Huntington
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