Lexington Books
Pages: 456
Trim: 7¼ x 9¼
978-0-7391-0549-8 • Hardback • August 2004 • $149.00 • (£115.00)
978-0-7391-0738-6 • Paperback • July 2004 • $62.99 • (£48.00)
Subjects: Political Science / General,
Political Science / Civics & Citizenship,
Political Science / International Relations / General,
Political Science / Security (National & International),
Political Science / Political Process / General,
Political Science / American Government / State,
Political Science / Public Policy / Regional Planning,
Political Science / Public Policy / Social Policy,
Social Science / General,
Social Science / Ethnic Studies / General,
Social Science / Human Geography,
Social Science / Methodology,
Social Science / Minority Studies,
Social Science / Research,
Social Science / Essays,
Social Science / Developing Countries
Albrecht Schnabel is senior research fellow at swisspeace, Bern. David Carment is director of the Centre for Security and Defense Studies and associate professor of international affairs at Carleton University, Ottawa.
Part 1 Introduction
Chapter 2 Defining Preventive Diplomacy in Europe: September 11 and its Impact on the EU's Common Foreign and Security
Chapter 2 Mainstreaming Conflict Prevention: From Rhetoric to Reality
Chapter 3 NATO and the EU in the Eastern Mediterranean: Conflict Preventers or Conflict Managers?
Chapter 6 The Conflict Prevention Agenda in Central Asia
Chapter 7 Status Quo Policy and Conflict Prevention in Central Asia
Chapter 8 Conflict Prevention in South Asia
Chapter 9 The OSCE as Primary Instrument of Conflict Prevention in Europe: Frameworks, Achievements, and Limitations of OSCE's Preventive Action
Chapter 9 Conflict Prevention in East Asia
Chapter 10 Conflict Prevention and Management in Africa
Chapter 12 Conflict Prevention: Responses by Subregional Organizations and Civil Society Organizations in Eastern Africa
Chapter 13 Conflict Prevention is Happening: Learning from "Successes" as Well as "Failures"
Chapter 13 The European Union and Conflict Prevention
Chapter 14 Early and Late Warning by the UN Secretary-General of Threats to the Peace: Article 99 Revisited
Chapter 14 The Role of the Organization of American States in Conflict Prevention
Chapter 15 UN Strategic and Operational Coordination: Mechanisms for Preventing and Managing Conflict
Part 16 Mainstreaming Conflict Prevention at the United Nations
Part 19 Causes, Consequences, and Prevention of Conflict: Developing Capacity at the Regional Level
Part 20 Mainstreaming Conflict Prevention at Regional Organizations: The Institutional Record
Chapter 20 Building UN Capacity in Early Warning and Prevention
Chapter 21 Conflict Prevention Mainstreaming: A comparison of Multilateral Actors
These two volumes form an encyclopedic study of the means of conflict prevention. The first volume examines agents and institutions, the second causes and capacities. The choice of chapters to encompass the components of the subject is careful and comprehensive, and there is much bredth and wisdom in the chapters themselves. The volumes deserve a wide and bifocal audience. For analysts, the two volumes push back the frontiers into new aspects to study; for practitioners, they show that the challenge is in applying what we know aplenty, not in hiding behind claims of ignorance...
— I. William Zartman, The Paul H. Nitze School of Advanced International Studies, Johns Hopkins University
It is always a pleasure to come across volumes with the breadth and scope as the ones edited so perceptively by David Carment and Albrecht Schnabel. Their gumption illuminates the patterns of mainstreaming conflict prevention in the post-Cold War period. In this respect, these tomes are not simply a reassessment of extant analytical frameworks, but an inspiring mapping of politics and policy of conflict prevention. Thence, the two parts of Conflict Prevention are a lasting testimony of the encyclopedic endeavor to chart the gist of different conflict prevention approaches, while presenting a cornucopia of insight and best-practice.
— Panorama
The scholarship is first-rate, thorough, and comprehensive. This work will be a significant contribution to the study, training and practice of conflict prevention. . . . Overall the original evidence, comprehensiveness, and integrative nature of the work are its best features.
— Franke Wilmer, Director and Professor, Political Science, Montana State University, Bozeman, , Director and Professor, Political Science, Montana State University, Bozeman
These two volumes form an encyclopedic study of the means of conflict prevention. The first volume examines agents and institutions, the second causes and capacities. The choice of chapters to encompass the components of the subject is careful and comprehensive, and there is much bredth and wisdom in the chapters themselves. The volumes deserve a wide and bifocal audience. For analysts, the two volumes push back the frontiers into new aspects to study; for practitioners, they show thatthe challenge is in applying what we know aplenty, not in hiding behind claims of ignorance.
— I. William Zartman, The Paul H. Nitze School of Advanced International Studies, Johns Hopkins University