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Few topics are as important in the study of international relations as the causes of wealth and poverty, and their interaction with militarization. Few scholars have contributed more to understanding these issues than Bruce Russett. Here Russett shows the linkages between wealth and conflict both substantively and temporally.PART I: INTRODUCTION Change and Continuity: Four Decades of Research and Policy Rich and Poor in 2000 A.D.: The Great Gulf PART II: CONSEQUENCES OF WEALTH AND POVERTY The Marginal Utility of Income Transfers to the Third World Comparative Public Health: The Political Economy of Human Misery and Well-Being; with H.Ghobarah & P.Huth Conflict and Coercion in Dependent States; with S.Jackson, D.Snidal & D.Sylvan Islam, Authoritarianism, and Female Empowerment: What Are the Linkages?; with D.Donno Defense Expenditures and National Well-Being The Mysterious Case of Vanishing Hegemony, or, Is Mark Twain Really Dead? PART III: A DEMOCRATIC HEGEMON? Theater Nuclear Forces: Public Opinion in Western Europe; with D.DeLuca Away from Nuclear Mythology What Makes Deterrence Work? Cases from 1900 to 1980; with P.Huth Ethical Dilemmas of Nuclear Deterrence Seeking Peace in the post-Cold War World of Hegemony and Terrorism; with J. R. Oneal A Fourth Wave? The Role of International Actors in Democratization
In this fascinating collection spanning three decades of work, a leading social scientist of his generation combines empirical science with moral reasoning to grapple with the complex and nuanced problems of international relations, from North-South inequality and health outcomes to nuclear weapons and the democratic peace. Russett's older articles are uncannily prescient, while his newest ones illuminate key issues for the coming years.
- Joshua Goldstein, Professor Emeritus of International Relations, American University
In this volume one of the most energetic and inquisitive minds of modern internatiols6
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