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SARAJEVO CRISIS (2) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   132921


World War I: a matter of respectability? / Loewener, Franca   Journal Article
Loewener, Franca Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract Since the beginning of the investigation into the origins of World War I, it has been claimed by researchers and politicians alike that the 'Great War' could have been averted had German decision makers not misperceived the structures of power. More specifically, it has been argued that German policy makers, while seizing the Bosnian window of opportunity for either preventive or expansionist aims,1 underestimated Great Britain's and Russia's willingness and readiness to intervene in the Sarajevo crisis of 1914.2 As a result, World War I appears to be the result of an accidental failure in deterrence.
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2
ID:   132924


World War I as a self-fulfilling catastrophe / Lindemann, Thomas   Journal Article
Lindemann, Thomas Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract It is a quite common conviction in international relations (IR) theory that what George Kennan called the 'original catastrophe' was predetermined and unavoidable. These explanations of World War I consider the conflict primarily as an inevitable by-product of material structures.1 On the one hand, are those who emphasize the impact of international system's constraints on state behavior - rigid alliances, bipolarization between great powers, the arms race, rivalry dynamics and so on.2 Yet, others regard countries' domestic structures as fundamental component in the outbreak of a diversionary war.3 If taken too far, these approaches can imply that the war was both rational and inevitable in that it was the logical consequence of internal and external tensions. Most importantly, these perspectives fail to take into account leaders' corresponding representations and narratives of 'material' reality and their role on the decision-making process. This essay devotes special attention to the hitherto neglected narrative dimension of World War I.4 In the following, I will propose a new interpretation for German brinkmanship during the July crisis.
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