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HILL, CHRISTOPHER (12) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   142884


37 years later : predicting the path of European integration – in retrospect / Hill, Christopher   Article
Hill, Christopher Article
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Summary/Abstract In the early Spring of 2015 the United Kingdom lost two of its best experts on European integration – John Pinder and Roger Morgan. Both brought academic expertise and great practical judgement to their support for the European project from a starting-point which stressed the importance of persuading the nation states of the benefits of increased integration. As we approach a referendum on Britain’s continued membership – a strange and unnecessary affair for most of those without a political axe to grind – their voices will be greatly missed, not least as the new generation of EU experts in British universities is increasingly cosmopolitan in character. The debate over BREXIT in the UK requires informed indigenous voices if it is not to be overtaken by raucous extremism, but they are ever fewer in number.
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2
ID:   078888


Bringing war home: foreign policy-making in multicultural societies / Hill, Christopher   Journal Article
Hill, Christopher Journal Article
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Publication 2007.
Summary/Abstract The debates about multiculturalism, and the democratic conduct of foreign policy, need bringing systematically together. A comparison of state approaches to cultural diversity helps us to understand their interrelationship. For different reasons, neither the United States nor France has experienced a direct link between multiculturalism and foreign policy, as Britain has, but each has the potential to do so. The complexities of social composition, and the growing overlaps between the domestic and international realms, mean that all three states need to revise significantly their understanding of the balance between efficiency and accountability in foreign policy-making, not least because civil peace and international peace are now connected in previously unimaginable ways. It should, nonetheless, be possible to rework practices and principles to allow the state to protect the interests of society as a whole without either scapegoating an internal minority or giving it special privileges.
Key Words Terrorism  Multiculturalism  War on Terror  Foreign Policy  Islam 
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3
ID:   001410


Century of revolution 1603-1714 / Hill, Christopher 1980  Book
Hill, Christopher Book
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Edition 2nd ed.
Publication London, Routledge, 1980.
Description 296p.Pbk
Standard Number 0415051789
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Accession#Call#Current LocationStatusPolicyLocation
040965942.06/HIL 040965MainOn ShelfGeneral 
4
ID:   080799


challenge of multiculturalism in European foreign policy / Aggestam, Lisbeth; Hill, Christopher   Journal Article
Hill, Christopher Journal Article
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Publication 2008.
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5
ID:   049843


Changing politics of foreign policy / Hill, Christopher 2003  Book
Hill, Christopher Book
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Publication New York, Palgrave Macmillan, 2003.
Description xx, 376p.
Standard Number 0333754239
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Accession#Call#Current LocationStatusPolicyLocation
045985327.1/HIL 045985MainOn ShelfGeneral 
6
ID:   104140


Changing the world? the problem of action in international poli / Hill, Christopher   Journal Article
Hill, Christopher Journal Article
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Publication 2011.
Summary/Abstract The issue of how to achieve change-in short of how to act-in a complex international system of 192 member states, without authoritative structures, or even a clear hierarchy of power, has been neglected in the literature of the academic subject of international relations. The focus has been predominantly on structures at the expense less of individual actors-much is written about the foreign policies of the major powers-than of the problem of agency itself. In terms of effecting significant change, how much is it reasonable to expect, and of whom? This lecture, which was given to mark the establishment of the new Department of Politics and International Studies at Cambridge, surveys the parameters of the problems of action, concluding that while states are still the most important site of agency at the international level the critical dilemma is now that of accepting and managing complexity and diversity. In particular the West must accept that its ability to provide leadership, unquestioned over the last two centuries, can no longer be assumed.
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7
ID:   068399


European dimension of the debate on UN security council members / Hill, Christopher   Journal Article
Hill, Christopher Journal Article
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Publication 2005.
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8
ID:   152762


Foreign policy in the twenty-first century / Hill, Christopher 2016  Book
Hill, Christopher Book
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Edition 2nd ed.
Publication London, Palgrave, 2016.
Description xv, 379p.: figures, tablespbk
Standard Number 9780230223738
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Accession#Call#Current LocationStatusPolicyLocation
059045327.1/HIL 059045MainOn ShelfGeneral 
9
ID:   066995


International relations and the European Union / Hill, Christopher (ed.); Smith, Michael (ed.) 2005  Book
Smith, Michael Book
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Publication Oxford, Oxford University Press, 2005.
Description xxiv, 469p.
Series New European Union series
Standard Number 0199273480
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Accession#Call#Current LocationStatusPolicyLocation
050429327.4/HIL 050429MainOn ShelfGeneral 
10
ID:   027406


National foreign policies and European political cooperation / Hill, Christopher (ed.) 1983  Book
Hill, Christopher Book
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Publication London, George allen & Unwin ( Publishers ) Limited, 1983.
Description xiii, 207p.
Standard Number 04043550215
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Accession#Call#Current LocationStatusPolicyLocation
022872327.4/HIL 022872MainOn ShelfGeneral 
11
ID:   145280


Powers of a kind: the anomalous position of France and the United Kingdom in world politics / Hill, Christopher   Article
Hill, Christopher Article
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Summary/Abstract Since the loss of their empires, Britain and France have been seen as states in historical but still only relative decline: no longer great powers but not typical of the large category of middle-range powers. Despite financial constraints and limited size they retain their status as permanent members of the UN Security Council and continue to display the ambition to exert global influence. At times, London and Paris deal with this anomaly by acting in harness but at others their foreign policies diverge dramatically, not least because of the contrasting domestic traditions from which they emerge, and because of their differing roles within the European Union. This article assesses the capacity of these two notable states to maintain a leading role in international politics given their own uneasy relationship and the significant constraints which they now face, both external and internal. The article is a revised version of the Martin Wight Memorial Lecture, held at Chatham House, London, on 3 November 2015.
Key Words World Politics  France  United Kingdom  Anomalous Position 
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12
ID:   037066


Terrorism and International order / Freedman, Lawrence; Hill, Christopher; Roberts, Adam; Vincet, R.J. 1986  Book
Roberts, Adam Book
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Publication London, Routledge & Kegan, 1986.
Description vii,107p.
Series Chattam house special papers
Standard Number 0710211414
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Accession#Call#Current LocationStatusPolicyLocation
027366303.625/FRE 027366MainOn ShelfGeneral