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PENTLAND, CHARLES C (3) answer(s).
 
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ID:   069330


European Union and civil conflict in Africa / Pentland, Charles C   Journal Article
Pentland, Charles C Journal Article
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Publication 2005.
Key Words European Union  Africa-Conflict  Africa  Civil Conflict 
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2
ID:   108778


From words to deeds: strategic culture and the European Union's Balkan military missions / Pentland, Charles C   Journal Article
Pentland, Charles C Journal Article
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Publication 2011.
Summary/Abstract Evidence that the European Union has acquired a distinctive strategic culture must be sought in the realms both of ideas and of action. Elements of a declaratory European Union strategic culture are to be found in the 2003 European Security Strategy and the subsequent reflections of officials and academics. A supplementary but perhaps more reliable guide to its central features may lie in how the European Union has conducted itself in the 24 European Security and Defence Policy missions, both military and civilian, that it has created since 2003. Overviews of these missions reveal some consistent themes and patterns of behaviour roughly congruent with the discourse of EU strategic culture. A closer analysis of the two Balkan military operations - Concordia in the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia and Althea in Bosnia-Herzegovina - gives a richer and more nuanced picture of the relationship between words and deeds. The aim in studying strategic culture should be not to reveal causality as much as to explore consistency between ideas and action.
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3
ID:   121247


Inis Claude's United Nations: Swords into Plowshares revisited / Pentland, Charles C   Journal Article
Pentland, Charles C Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract On 1 October 2012 Canada's foreign minister addressed the United Nations general assembly. Embedded in an otherwise bland text were several sharp jabs at the UN, notably concerning the self-absorption of the organization's internal reform processes and the inadequacy of its response to humanitarian crises such as that engulfing Syria.1 These criticisms, predictably echoed in the right wing of the Canadian media, soon evoked ripostes whose burden was that the minister seemed woefully, perhaps willfully, ignorant of the organization he was criticizing: UN reform is a process for which western governments, including Canada's, had pressed for years; and it was some member-states, not the UN as such, that were hesitant over Syria.2
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