Lexington Books
Pages: 302
Trim: 6¼ x 9¼
978-1-4985-7636-9 • Hardback • May 2019 • $129.00 • (£99.00)
978-1-4985-7637-6 • eBook • May 2019 • $122.50 • (£95.00)
J.L.Black is professor emeritus and distinguished research professor at Carleton University.
Michael Johns is chair and associate professor of the Department of Political Science at Laurentian University.
Alanda Theriault is humanities lecturer at Georgian College.
1. J.L. Black — Crisis in Ukraine 2013-15: A Paradigm for the New World Disorder.
2. Michael Johns— Breaking Up is Hard to Do: Brexit and its Aftermath.
3. Christopher J. Fettweis — The Presidency Is What Trump Makes of It. The Trump Test and the New World Disorder.
4. Jeff Sahadeo— Springtime for Central Asia? Belts and Roads, Partrnerships and Risks Amid Global Realignment.
5. Aurélie Lacassagne— Turkey: Missed Opportunities.
6. Ivan Kurilla — Russia, Trump, and the United States: Uses of the Other in Political Crises.
7. Robert C. Austin — Are We There Yet? The Quest for Stability and Democracy in the Balkans.
8. Tolan Pica— Brexit - Implications of an Independent Nuclear Free Scotland. Preventing the Sinking of Britain's Nuclear Submarine Program.
GLOBAL ISSUES
9. Amy Pate - The Challenges of Crowd-Sourced Terrorism in a Globalized World.
10. Yann Breault and Michèle Rioux— The Globalization/Deglobalization Dialectic and its Impact on the Contemporary Multipolar Security Architecture.
11. David Anderson-Rodgers– Internally Displaced Persons: Norm Emergence and Strain in a Disordered World.
12. Brett Buchanan -- New Environmentalisms: The Anthropocene and Other Climate Stories.
The sheer breadth of topics covered in The New World Disorder: Challenges and Threats in an Uncertain World is incredibly impressive. Hitting on pressing global security challenges such as terrorism, the conflict in Ukraine, and the United Kingdom's nuclear deterrent and Brexit, this tome addresses many issues of relevance to both scholars and policymakers. Taken together, the authors make a compelling case for the beginning of a new period of disorder and international transition.
— Brian Mazanec, Missouri State University
This book deserves a wide readership for the light that it throws on many of the problems that our troubled world faces today. Each of the contributors helps to dispel misunderstandings and distortions.
— Paul Dukes, Emeritus Professor of History, University of Aberdeen
Larry Black and his team of excellent scholars provide us with a high-level analysis of defining cases and issues in the growing world disorder. As usual Larry Black takes us out the conventional wisdom. Leaving aside recipes for a new order the essays of this book offer stimulating ideas and perspectives to circumvent the very possible worse case scenarios.
— Jacques Lévesque, University of Quebec, Montreal