Logic of Conflict

Logic of Conflict

Author: Steven Greffenius

Publisher: Routledge

Published: 2019-07-12

Total Pages: 218

ISBN-13: 1315486318

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The author’s argument ties this literature to a field that is often called the logic of inquiry. He criticizes an influential and deliberately analytical approach to the study of international conflict and show what can be gained by bringing more integrative or synthetic approaches to bear on problems in the field. The study started as an effort to work out some problems in international relations theory and it has remained that through eight years of writing and research. Still, the book is more than incidentally about the Middle East, and evidence from the region informs the argument made here. This evidence is of two kinds: traditional historical material from both primary and secondary sources, and data on events that have occurred during the course of both conflictual and cooperative exchanges between the actors there. The treatment focuses on the relationship between Egypt and Israel between 1967 and 1979, a period that saw their relations pass from the most intense antagonism to a reasonable degree of comity if not friendship.


Linkage Politics In The Middle East

Linkage Politics In The Middle East

Author: Yaacov Bar-siman-tov

Publisher: Routledge

Published: 2019-03-04

Total Pages: 173

ISBN-13: 0429716974

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Traditional studies of linkage politics tend to assume that internal political instability leads a government to divert attention from internal problems by initiating an external conflict or stressing the pressures of international problems. In contrast, quantitative studies typically conclude that there is little or no relationship between interna