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DORAN, CHARLES F (4) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   066445


Is major war obsolete?: an exchange / Kagan, Donald; Cohen, Eliot A; Doran, Charles F.; Mandelbaum, Michael   Article
Cohen, Eliot A Article
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Publication 1999.
Key Words Six Day War 
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2
ID:   041464


Myth oil and politics: introduction to the political economy of petroleum. / Doran, Charles F 1977  Book
Doran, Charles F Book
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Publication New York, The Free press, 1977.
Description x, 226p.
Standard Number 0029075807
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Accession#Call#Current LocationStatusPolicyLocation
017555338.27282/DOR 017555MainOn ShelfGeneral 
3
ID:   002559


Systems in crisis: new imperatives of high politics at century's end / Doran, Charles F 1991  Book
Doran, Charles F Book
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Publication Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 1991.
Description xviii,294p.,figures
Series Cambridge studies in international relations; 16
Standard Number 0521401852
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Copies: C:1/I:0,R:0,Q:0
Circulation
Accession#Call#Current LocationStatusPolicyLocation
033875327/DOR 033875MainOn ShelfGeneral 
4
ID:   132923


World War I as existential crisis amidst the shifting tides of / Doran, Charles F   Journal Article
Doran, Charles F Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract Today, as throughout history, a 'single dynamic' of structural change is shaping the power cycles of all of the great powers - and the expectations that each state has about its future security and foreign policy role.1 Across the six centuries of the emerging modern state system, states have competed for relative power share, attempted to advance foreign policy roles, and struggled against the 'bounds of the system' (finiteness of share) that limits and contours each state's cycle of relative power and its possibilities for role gratification. Projections of future power, role and security are embedded at each historical point on the coevolving power cycles, reflecting the emergent 'trends of history' and 'shifting balance of world forces' experienced by statesmen and assessed in economic and diplomatic history. Implicit in the expression 'peaceful rise' that permeates discussion of the rise of China today is the coded question: Will the world this century repeat the mistakes of the early twentieth century, mistakes that fueled the spiral into World War I (WWI)? For founders of the field of international relations (IR) and world statesmen negotiating international regimes, witnesses to that catastrophe, the quintessential problem confronting statecraft was how to integrate an increasingly powerful great state into the existing global balance of power and community of nations itself experiencing the challenges and uncertainties of structural change - the so-called dilemma of peaceful change.
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