You can manage bookmarks using lists, please log in to your user account for this.
Media type:
Book
Title:
The OSCE: soft security for a hard world
:
competing theories for understanding the OSCE
Contains:
Foreword
/ Finn LaursenPreface / Roberto Dominguez
Chapter 1. Introduction: the OSCE as a security provider
/ Roberto Dominguez. Theories, security and the OSCE.
Chapter 2. Realist perspectives. The missed opportunity to create a pan-European collective security organization
/ Giulio Venneri
Chapter 3. Institutionalist theories. The OSCE in the western Balkans
/ Boyka Stefanova
Chapter 4. Social constructivism. Re-constructing European security (1965-1975)
/ Pablo Toral
Chapter 5. Post-structuralism. Soft power as governmentality and normalization in the OSCE's role in Croatia
/ Laura Zanotti
Chapter 6. The Copenhagen School. Societal security and the OSCE's human dimension
/ Markus Thiel
Chapter 7. Soft power. The role of Canada in the OSCE
/ Benjamin Zyla. The OSCE in the twenty-first century.
Chapter 8. The European architecture. OSCE, NATO, and the EU
/ Maxime Larivé
Chapter 9. Conclusion: Interpreting the OSCE
/ Roberto Dominguez.
Description:
This book explores why the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) remains a largely unknown entity as far as the general public are concerned, despite its significant day-to-day activity not only on the diplomatic front, but also via its 16 field operations. While the main achievement of its predecessor, the Conference for Security and Cooperation in Europe (CSCE), was to bridge the East-West divide in Europe during the Cold War, the CSCE was transformed into the OSCE in 1995 to respond to the various challenges generated by the emergence of a multipolar world. Ever since, the OSCE has been involved in diplomacy, empowered with instruments of persuasion rather than coercion. Is the OSCE a significant regional organization in dealing with international security? Has the OSCE been able to reinvent itself to face the post-Cold War world? What type of security is the OSCE providing to its member states? This book provides a variety of answers based on different theoretical perspectives and invites the reader to reflect on the nature of soft power within international relations."--page [4] of cover