74,99 €
inkl. MwSt.
Versandkostenfrei*
Versandfertig in 6-10 Tagen
payback
37 °P sammeln
  • Broschiertes Buch

Security experts from North Africa, Europe and the US explore confidence-building measures in the CSCE/OSCE for the Mediterranean. They review the Northern debate and Southern perceptions of four dialogues (OSCE, NATO, WEU, EU). Case-studies on Bosnia-Hercegovina and Cyprus discuss confidence-building measures for conflict resolution. The book offers proposals for conflict prevention, short- and long-term partnership-building measures and a code of conduct and prospects for CBMs and PBMs in Euro-Mediterranean relations for the twenty-first century.

Produktbeschreibung
Security experts from North Africa, Europe and the US explore confidence-building measures in the CSCE/OSCE for the Mediterranean. They review the Northern debate and Southern perceptions of four dialogues (OSCE, NATO, WEU, EU). Case-studies on Bosnia-Hercegovina and Cyprus discuss confidence-building measures for conflict resolution. The book offers proposals for conflict prevention, short- and long-term partnership-building measures and a code of conduct and prospects for CBMs and PBMs in Euro-Mediterranean relations for the twenty-first century.
Autorenporträt
HANS GÜNTER BRAUCH (Germany): Privatdozent at the Free University of Berlin, chairman of AFES-PRESS. He was guest professor at the universities of Frankfurt on Main, Leipzig and Greifswald. He has published more than thirty books and twenty research reports in English and German on issues of security and armament policy, climate, energy and migration policies. ANTONIO MARQUINA (Spain): Professor of International Relations at Complutense University in Madrid, director of UNISCI and of fourteen research projects; author, editor and co-author of seventy-two books and reports in English and Spanish. From 1996 to 1997 he was the first president of STRADEMED, a network on security, defence and development issues in the Mediterranean. ABDELWAHAB BIAD (Algeria/France): Associate Professor, University of Rouen in France. Assistant Professor of International Relations, University Annada (1987-1994), visiting fellow at UNIDIR (1988), at the ICRC in Geneva (1992) and at the Hague Academy of International Law. He is the author of thirty-two book chapters and articles in English and French. PETER LIOTTA (USA): Professor, US Naval War College; previous assignments to Greece (1993-1996) and Yugoslavia (1988-1989). A language editor, his work has been translated into Bosnian, Bulgarian, French, Greek, Japanese, Macedonian, Serbo-Croat, and Spanish.