ABSTRACT

A comprehensive, clearly presented and accessible text covering the totality of the peacekeeping experience since the early twentieth century.

This is essential reading for all undergraduates on politics, international relations and contemporary history programmes. It is also an excellent resource for taught postgraduate courses in these subject areas.

The narrative is primarily chronological; key themes such as legality and 'collective security' are traced throughout. The chronology is based on the key periods in the development of peacekeeping, marking stages in the evolution of the concept determined by changes in the nature of the international system over the past six decades.

chapter 2|20 pages

Peacekeeping before the UN

The inter-war years

chapter 3|18 pages

Collective security revived

The formation of the United Nations

chapter 4|18 pages

Peacekeeping resumed

From Palestine and Kashmir to Suez

chapter 5|33 pages

Peacekeeping as immunization

Regional crises in the cold war

chapter 6|17 pages

Peacekeeping and détente

The Middle East in the 1970s

chapter 7|30 pages

New horizons

Peacekeeping and the end of the cold war

chapter 8|21 pages

The break-up of Yugoslavia and the Soviet Union

Peacekeeping and the end of the multinational state

chapter 9|31 pages

Africa I

Decolonization and contested legitimacy

chapter 10|23 pages

Africa II

Peacekeeping in stateless terrain

chapter 11|14 pages

Peacekeeping and the international system in the twenty-first century

Looking back to look forward