Archive for 2012

Did Revolution or Regime Implosion End the Soviet Union?

Timothy Frayne • Jun 15 2012 • Essays

The collapse of the USSR was almost entirely based on the ‘regime implosion’ within the CPSU which was ill-prepared for newly introduced reforms and their consequences.

Review — The Justice Cascade

Peter Brett • Jun 15 2012 • Features

For two decades now Kathyrn Sikkink has been a leading scholar of human rights in world politics. The Justice Cascade is perhaps her most ambitious work to date.

It’s Official: Syria is in a State of Civil War. Or is it?

Jacob Mundy • Jun 15 2012 • Articles

Achieving an effective international consensus to stop the killing in Syria has little to do with semantics. It has much more to do with the squandered legacy of the Responsibility to Protect.

Implications from Aung San Suu Kyi’s European Tour

Thitinan Pongsudhirak • Jun 15 2012 • Articles

Suu Kyi’s chief challenge may be to avoid the temptation to turn vindication into vindictiveness. If she panders to her Western supporters at the expense of her partners at home, it would be a bad sign.

Sectarian Violence in Burma: A Country Opening Up, or Collapsing?

Kenton Clymer • Jun 15 2012 • Articles

The existence of ethnic minority insurgencies will not bring about the collapse of the government. Nor will they have a decisive impact on other aspects of Burma’s reforms or on the decisions of outsiders to work with a reformed Burmese government.

Is the Destruction of Urban Structures a Form of Violence?

Dobromir Zaprianov • Jun 15 2012 • Essays

People live in an environment composed of buildings and structures that represent their identity, collective memory and culture. An attack on that is an attack on people.

Perceptions of the Other: Iran’s National Identity and Nuclear Policy

Gianna Gayle Amul • Jun 14 2012 • Articles

Iranian leaders’ different national identity conceptions provide insights into Tehran’s motivations for possibly acquiring a nuclear weapon, as well as the fallacy of Washington’s current approach.

Religion, Sacred Values and Conflict

Alasdair McKay • Jun 14 2012 • Articles

Examining the role of sacred values in war may offer greater opportunities for breakthroughs into peace in seemingly intractable conflicts than hitherto realised.

US-Indian Relations: Permanent Interests Not Permanent Friends

Lawrence Korb and Alex Rothman • Jun 14 2012 • Articles

It is important that the United States do a better job of defending its own interests in its negotiations with India. Nevertheless, there are areas of common strategic concern where we can work with the Indian government to the benefit of both nations.

Global Oil: Don’t Worry About Supply, Worry About Markets

Andreas Goldthau • Jun 14 2012 • Articles

Recent events surrounding the Arab Spring have made consumers fear ever-higher oil prices. The changing geopolitics of oil are about to tilt power towards countries less prone to embracing the liberal market paradigm.

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