Political Conflict in Southern Europe: Regulation, Regression, and Morphogenesis
By (Author) Kleomeni Koutsoukis
By (author) Eduard A. Ziegenhagen
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
28th February 1992
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
European history
320.94
Hardback
176
Although the control or regulation of political conflict is a constant concern of governments and a source of substantial speculation, empirical investigation of systems of regulation is a relatively recent enterprise. How destabilizing events such as separatism, trans-national disputes and decolonization are translated into political conflict through economic, political and social systems is explored in this in-depth study of eight nations in southern Europe for the period 1946 to 1986.
EDUARD A. ZIEGENHAGEN is a Professor of Political Science at the University Center, State University of New York at Binghamton, a Research Associate at the Center for Education and Social Research and a Fellow of the Center for Leadership Studies. He served as a consultant to the President's Commission on the Causes and Prevention of Violence and as a member of research teams investigating civil strife in American cities. Dr. Ziegenhagen is the author of The Regulation of Political Conflict (Praeger, 1986) and contributes to professional journals on the topic of conflict behavior and change in political systems. KLEOMENIS S. KOUTSOUKIS is an Assistant Professor at the Panteion University of Social and Political Sciences, a researcher at the Foundation for Mediterranean Studies and a practicing attorney in Athens, Greece. He is the author of The Political and Socioeconomic Development of Greece: 1919-1981. Dr. Koutsoukis also is a frequent contributor to professional journals in Europe and America on issues involving political change and modernization, political leadership, and the military in politics.