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PUSHKINA, DARYA (4) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   068275


recipe for success? ingredients of a successful peacekeeping mi / Pushkina, Darya   Journal Article
Pushkina, Darya Journal Article
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Publication 2006.
Key Words Conflict  Peacekeeping  United Nations 
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2
ID:   075399


Towards a strategic partnership? The US and Russian response to / Giegerich, Bastian; Pushkina, Darya; Mount, Adam   Journal Article
Giegerich, Bastian Journal Article
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Publication 2006.
Summary/Abstract The article surveys the responses to the European Security and Defence Policy (ESDP) of two important external actors: the United States and Russia. It explains the motivations behind these responses and the effect of the latter on the development of the ESDP. The survey finds that both the Clinton and the Bush administrations in the USA have expressed cautious support for the initiative while insisting on NATO's salience in Europe. Russia's enthusiasm for the project is an effort to ensure its participation in European and global security affairs. The conclusion of the article briefly explores the implications of the empirical observations in the light of the future development of the ESDP.
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3
ID:   058982


Towards successful peacekeeping remembering Croatia / Pushkina, Darya Dec 2004  Journal Article
Pushkina, Darya Journal Article
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Publication Dec 2004.
Key Words Conflict  Peacekeeping  Croatia  Internal Conflict  Civil War  United Nations 
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4
ID:   114738


United Nations peacekeeping in Timor-Leste / Pushkina, Darya; Maier, Philip   Journal Article
Pushkina, Darya Journal Article
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Publication 2012.
Summary/Abstract This article seeks to elucidate many of the avoidable difficulties that the United Nations (UN) face when intervening in a given conflict. The article begins with a review of the UN's capability to act, fund, cooperate, and coordinate in peacekeeping missions. The UN's capability to respond to conflict is, in theory, boundless; however, it is limited by the realities of operating within the UN's vast bureaucracy and the possibility of member states having competing national interests. The article then proceeds with an analysis of the UN involvement in Timor-Leste, focusing first on the United Nations Mission in East Timor - the referendum monitoring mission - and then covering larger operations such as the United Nations Transitional Administration in East Timor and the United Nations Mission of Support in East Timor, and finally analyzing more recent missions: the United Nations Office in Timor-Leste and the ongoing United Nations Integrated Mission in Timor-Leste. The article concludes that the UN's performance is dependent upon a steady commitment to supplying resources and the ability to properly assess and appropriately respond to specific realities within the context of a peacekeeping operation.
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