Is the liberal order in decline? Can we see evidence of that decline in the UN Security Council? Brian Frederking challenges the increasingly popular "decline" narrative by examining the practices of the Security Council in the decades since the end of the Cold War.
Relying on both qualitative and quantitative data, Frederking shows that the council has consistently enforced liberal rules to resolve conflicts regarding war crimes, human rights, and democracy. What many interpret as a decline, he argues, is instead a process of renegotiation—the outcome of which remains a liberal order, but one that is less influenced than in the past by the US and its allies.
CONTENTS:
The Security Council and the Liberal Order.
The Rules of World Politics.
The Critics of Collective Security.
The Collective Security Dataset.
Saying No on the Security Council.
Punishing War Crimes.
Supporting Human Rights.
Defending Democracy.
Threats to the Liberal Order: Russia and China.
The Ambivalent Hegemon: The United States.
Renegotiating the Liberal Order.
Arabs and Israelis Conflict and Peacemaking in ... -- ©2022
Abdel Monem Said Aly
List Price : £ 44.00China and Autocracy Political Influence and the ... -- ©2021
Miao-ling Lin Hasenkamp
List Price : £ 29.00Citizenship and Place Case Studies on the Borders ... -- ©2018
Cherstin M. Lyon
List Price : £ 28.00Democratization and Struggles Against Injustice A ... -- ©2023
Justo Serrano Zamora
List Price : £ 30.00Predicting the Future in Science,Economics, and ... -- ©2014
Frank Whelon Wayman
List Price : £ 115.00The Elgar Companion to Post-Conflict Transition -- ©2018
Hans-Joachim Giessmann
List Price : £ 135.00Waging War With Gold: National Security and the ... -- ©2023
Charles A. Dainoff
List Price : US$ 105.00
B-116, Sector 67,
Gautam Budh Nagar
Noida - 201301 Uttar Pradesh,
India
Mobile: +91-9810773221 / 23
Landline: +91-120-2484152
orders@adityabooks.in
Powered by Cyberspace Networking Systems Pvt. Ltd