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RIVALS
(4)
answer(s).
Srl
Item
1
ID:
143160
Rights of passage : rival prepare for South China Sea adjudication
/ Hayton, Bill
Hayton, Bill
Article
0 Rating(s) & 0 Review(s)
Key Words
Regional Security
;
South China Sea
;
China
;
Unclos
;
Rivals
;
Rights of Passage
;
SCS - Adjudication
;
Defuse Tension
;
Creeping Militarisation
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2
ID:
118722
UAE's strategy against Iran
/ Johny, Shelly
Johny, Shelly
Journal Article
0 Rating(s) & 0 Review(s)
Publication
2011.
Key Words
Iran
;
Saudi Arabia
;
UAE
;
Regional Power
;
Communist Insurgency
;
United States Arab Emirates
;
Rivals
;
Iranian Revolution - 1980
;
Communist Threats
;
Komeini
;
Sunni - Shia Rivalry
;
Foreign Policy
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3
ID:
142896
United States and China: collaborators or rivals?
/ Krasner, Stephen D
Krasner, Stephen D
Article
0 Rating(s) & 0 Review(s)
Summary/Abstract
There is only a short list of major variables that we can deploy to understand social phenomena. For the international environment really only three: material power (military and economic), material interests, and values. The relative weight that analysts and policymakers give to each of these depends on the specific phenomena that they are trying to understand. For any effort to explain the dynamics of international politics and the nature of international regimes, power remains the single most potent factor.
Key Words
United States
;
China
;
Collaborators
;
Rivals
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4
ID:
154926
Web of links : rival connections and strategic accommodation in response to threats
/ Akcinaroglu, Seden ; Radziszewski, Elizabeth
Akcinaroglu, Seden
Journal Article
0 Rating(s) & 0 Review(s)
Summary/Abstract
We examine what leads states to accommodate enduring, international rivals in response to immediate threats. Drawing from network theory, we hypothesize that the direct and indirect ties the threatened state’s rivals form with each other and with other states in the global system play a critical role in shaping crisis. A threatened state should be more likely to accommodate rivals with economic connections to other actors. These connections generate influence, through leverage or information that can lead to crisis de-escalation. A threatened state is less likely to accommodate a rival that has military alliances with other rivals because credible allies are less likely to respond to such overtures. We use network analysis and data from the post–Cold War era to support the argument, shedding light on the importance of local and global connectivity in conflict management.
Key Words
Conflict
;
Accommodation
;
Global Networks
;
Rivals
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