Contending Dramas: A Cognitive Approach to International Organization
By (Author) Martha Cottam
By (author) Chih Y. Shih
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
18th February 1992
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
327.1
Hardback
280
As the field of political psychology has grown, so has the study of foreign policy behaviour and motivation. This collection of essays offers the metaphor of drama to pull together the conceptual and behavioural elements of current concepts in the field. The volume uses a common political framework to examine the impact of perceptual changes resulting from the end of the Cold War on the organization and interpretation of international issues. Exploring trends in the superpowers, Europe, Africa and Asia, and examining issues ranging from security to political and human rights matters, the analyses point out a number of trends in policy and strategy that are associated with patterns of perceputal change. In general these essays take a more pessimistic view of post-Cold War policy trends than one finds in the field at the moment. The articles examine the confusion and potential for continued international conflict that result from the end of the Cold War and they argue that co-operation in international politics is not an inevitable outcome of the new relationship between the United States and the Soviet Union. They argue that there is much greater opportunity for new directions in conflict resolution but that without careful attention to the reformulation of perceptions and policy, those opportunities could be lost.
MARTHA L. COTTAM is Associate Professor of Political Science at Washington State University. She has published one book and several articles on political psychology. CHIH-YU SHIH is Professor at National Taiwan University. He is the author of two books and a frequent contributor to scholarly journals.