The Search for a Common European Foreign and Security Policy. Leaders, Cognitions, and Questions of Institutional Viability.
Akan Malici
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Description for The Search for a Common European Foreign and Security Policy. Leaders, Cognitions, and Questions of Institutional Viability.
Paperback. When Kissinger lamented, 'When I want to call Europe, I cannot find a phone number', the implication was clear. Since then, the momentum of the EU towards a common foreign and security policy has increased. Yet, the viability of this institutionalization effort is questionable. This book advances a new perspective on this paradox." Series: Advances in Foreign Policy Analysis. Num Pages: 235 pages, biography. BIC Classification: JPA; JPS; JPSD. Category: (G) General (US: Trade). Dimension: 216 x 140 x 13. Weight in Grams: 304.
When Kissinger lamented, 'When I want to call Europe, I cannot find a phone number', the implication was clear. Since then, the momentum of the EU towards a common foreign and security policy has increased. Yet, the viability of this institutionalization effort is questionable. This book advances a new perspective on this paradox.
When Kissinger lamented, 'When I want to call Europe, I cannot find a phone number', the implication was clear. Since then, the momentum of the EU towards a common foreign and security policy has increased. Yet, the viability of this institutionalization effort is questionable. This book advances a new perspective on this paradox.
Product Details
Format
Paperback
Publication date
2015
Publisher
Palgrave Macmillan United Kingdom
Number of pages
235
Condition
New
Series
Advances in Foreign Policy Analysis
Number of Pages
219
Place of Publication
Basingstoke, United Kingdom
ISBN
9781349372119
SKU
V9781349372119
Shipping Time
Usually ships in 15 to 20 working days
Ref
99-15
About Akan Malici
AKAN MALICI is Assistant Professor of Political Science at Furman University, USA.
Reviews for The Search for a Common European Foreign and Security Policy. Leaders, Cognitions, and Questions of Institutional Viability.
"This book has the potential to dramatically revise the way international institutions are studied in the fields of foreign policy and international relations. Rather than fall into the endogeneity trap posed by examining structural features of institutions as causes of institutional viability, Malici develops a cognitive theory that locates causality in the agents that constitute institutions. This theory is explored ... Read more