Democratic Peace Democratic Peace

Democratic Peace

A Political Biography

    • 37,99 €
    • 37,99 €

Description de l’éditeur

The Democratic Peace Thesis holds that democracies rarely make war on other democracies. Political scientists have advanced numerous theories attempting to identify precisely which elements of democracy promote this mutual peace, often hoping that Democratic Peace could be the final and ultimate antidote to war. However, as the theories were taken up by political figures, the immediate outcomes were war and the perpetuation of hostilities.

Political theorist Piki Ish-Shalom sketches the origins and early academic development of the Democratic Peace Thesis. He then focuses on the ways in which various Democratic Peace Theories were used by Bill Clinton and George W. Bush both to shape and to justify U.S. foreign policy, particularly the U.S. stance on the Israeli-Palestinian situation and the War in Iraq. In the conclusion, Ish-Shalom boldly confronts the question of how much responsibility theoreticians must bear for the political uses—and misuses—of their ideas.

GENRE
Politique et actualité
SORTIE
2013
22 juillet
LANGUE
EN
Anglais
LONGUEUR
266
Pages
ÉDITIONS
University of Michigan Press
DÉTAILS DU FOURNISSEUR
Chicago Distribution Center
TAILLE
1,1
Mo
Concepts at Work Concepts at Work
2021
Beyond the Veil of Knowledge Beyond the Veil of Knowledge
2019
Global Nonkilling Working Papers #3: To Promote Change Toward the Measurable Goal of a Killing-free World Global Nonkilling Working Papers #3: To Promote Change Toward the Measurable Goal of a Killing-free World
2011