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Trusting enemies : interpersonal relationships in international conflict / Nicholas J. Wheeler.

By: Material type: TextTextPublisher: Oxford, United Kingdom ; New York : Oxford University Press, 2018Description: xxi, 349 pages ; 25 cmISBN:
  • 9780199696475
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 327 WHE
Contents:
Introduction: The interpersonal is the international -- part one: 1. Trust, signalling and international relations -- 2: Trust: face to face -- 3. Enemy images -- 4. The priority of trust in signal interpretation -- 5. From interpersonal trust to security communities -- part two: 6. USA-Soviet Union, 1985-1989 -- 7. India-Pakistan, 1998-1999 -- 8. USA-Iran, 2009-2010 -- Conclusion.
Summary: How can two enemies transform their relationship into a cooperative one? The starting point for this book is that the discipline of International Relations has not done a good job of answering this question, and the reason for this is that the concept of trust - and the possibility of building new trusting relationships between enemies - has been marginalized by the discipline. The author argues that to understand how enemies cooperate, we need to focus on the potential for building trusting relationships between state leaders. The book argues that it is forging personal relationships of trust across the enemy divide that hold out the best chance of breaking down the 'enemy images' that fuel security competition.
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Rs.1200/-
TRP40/294

Includes bibliographical references (pages 297-333) and index.

Introduction: The interpersonal is the international -- part one: 1. Trust, signalling and international relations -- 2: Trust: face to face -- 3. Enemy images -- 4. The priority of trust in signal interpretation -- 5. From interpersonal trust to security communities -- part two: 6. USA-Soviet Union, 1985-1989 -- 7. India-Pakistan, 1998-1999 -- 8. USA-Iran, 2009-2010 -- Conclusion.

How can two enemies transform their relationship into a cooperative one? The starting point for this book is that the discipline of International Relations has not done a good job of answering this question, and the reason for this is that the concept of trust - and the possibility of building new trusting relationships between enemies - has been marginalized by the discipline. The author argues that to understand how enemies cooperate, we need to focus on the potential for building trusting relationships between state leaders. The book argues that it is forging personal relationships of trust across the enemy divide that hold out the best chance of breaking down the 'enemy images' that fuel security competition.

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