War and Governance: International Security in a Changing World Order
By (Author) Richard Weitz
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
5th October 2011
United States
General
Non Fiction
Warfare and defence
355.033
Hardback
232
Width 156mm, Height 235mm
907g
An insightful and expert assessment examines how best to endand avertwars. How do we avoid war To arrive at an answer, master analyst Richard Weitz explores the ways nations, international organizations, and individuals have sought to bring order to an inherently disorderly phenomenonpotential and actual violent conflict among organized political entities. Specifically, War and Governance: International Security in a Changing World Order analyzes a number of critical issues such as whether regional security institutions have distinct advantages and liabilities in promoting international security, as compared with universal organizations like the United Nations. Other important questions are addressed, as well. How will international organizations, such as the UN, EU, and NATO, change the nature of war in the 21st centuryand be changed by it What role might less formal institutions and nongovernmental organizations play in peacemaking Will the nation-state remain the most important international security actor The book ends with a gap analysis that identifies incongruities between international needs and capabilitiesand suggests ways to overcome them.
Richard Weitz, PhD, is director of the Center for Political-Military Analysis at the Hudson Institute and the author of Revitalising US-Russian Security Cooperation: Practical Measures.