Of Peace and Power; Promoting Canadian Interests through Peacekeeping
Leverbaar
Book synopsis More than 50 years after Canada played an instrumental role in its inception, peacekeeping has once again returned to the center of the national foreign policy debate. Having participated in every peacekeeping operation set up during the Cold War and lived through the fundamental changes the activity has undergone in the 1990s, Ottawa is currently struggling to define a viable approach to peacekeeping for the 21st century. As a timely contribution to this effort, the study reveals the overt and subtle ways in which Canada's commitment to peacekeeping has contributed to the promotion of vital national interests in the past and might continue to do so in the future. Contents Contents: Where peacekeeping fits into Canada's middle power foreign policy - How peacekeeping helped Canada to successfully fight the Cold War - Why expanded peacekeeping failed to serve Canadian interests in the 1990s - What a viable contemporary approach to peacekeeping could look like. About the author(s)/editor(s) The Author: Karsten Jung studied International Relations in Bonn and Washington, D.C. He received his master's degree in 2007 and currently works as a business consultant in Berlin.
Ingenaaid | 138 pagina's | Duits
Verschenen in 2009
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