European University Institute Library

Beyond great powers and hegemons, why secondary states support, follow or challenge, edited by Kristen P. Williams, Steven E. Lobell, and Neal G. Jesse

Label
Beyond great powers and hegemons, why secondary states support, follow or challenge, edited by Kristen P. Williams, Steven E. Lobell, and Neal G. Jesse
Language
eng
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Index
index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
Beyond great powers and hegemons
Nature of contents
bibliography
Oclc number
748941809
Responsibility statement
edited by Kristen P. Williams, Steven E. Lobell, and Neal G. Jesse
Sub title
why secondary states support, follow or challenge
Table Of Contents
The leader can't lead when the followers won't follow : the limitations of hegemony / Neal G. Jesse, Steven E. Lobell, Galia Press-Barnathan, and Kristen P. Williams -- Romania's resistance to the USSR / Kristen P. Williams -- Cuba, Angola and the Soviet Union / Jennifer Kibbe -- Ireland's singular stance : pursuing neutrality as a means to resist the hegemon / Neal G. Jesse -- Power disparities and strategic trade : domestic consequence of U.S.-Jordan trade concessions / Steven E. Lobell -- Comply or defy? : following the hegemon to market / Maria Sampanis -- Western Europe, NATO and the U.S. : leash-slipping, not leash-cutting / Galia Press-Barnathan -- Pakistan : anatomy of a hegemonic malcontent / John R. Dreyer -- Resistance is util (useful) : responses to Brazilian hegemony / Nancy D. Lapp -- Reacting to Russia : foreign relations of the former Soviet bloc / Shale Horowitz and Michael D. Tyburski -- South Asia : conflict, hegemony, and power balancing / Srini Sitaraman -- China and its neighbors : too close for comfort? / Alexander C. Tan -- South Africa : benign hegemony and resistance / Stephen F. Burgess
Content
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