The Czech Republic: A Nation of Velvet (2000) and Ideology and National Identity in Post-Communist Foreign Policies (edited, 2003). Among his books are International Society after the Cold War: Anarchy and Order Reconsidered (co-edited, 1996).
Rick Fawn is a Senior Lecturer in International Relations at the University of St. Her books include Women and Ideology in the Soviet Union (1989), Redefining Russian Society and Polity (1993), Post-Soviet Women: From the Baltic to Central Asia (edited, 1997) and Kosovo: Perceptions of War and its Aftermath (co-edited, 2002). Mary Buckley is currently an independent scholar living in London having previously enjoyed research affiliations at Michigan, Kiev, Moscow, and Azerbaijan universities, and teaching posts at Edinburgh and London universities. Cummings, Joanne Wright, Joanne van Selm, Brigitte Granville, Christopher Coker and Barry Buzan. Daniels, Roland Dannreuther, Raymond Hinnebusch, Gwenn Okruhlik, David Newman, David Kenda Adaka Kikaya, James Putzel, Samina Yasmeen, Raju G. Contributors: Paul Wilkinson, Rohan Gunaratna, Robert Singh, Andrew Dorman, Richard McAllister, Adrian Hyde-Price, Philip A. It is essential reading for all students of international relations and terrorism as well as the general reader wishing to understand this complex subject. There are now many books available on terrorism but few can boast the quality and range of the contributions to this volume, which locate the war on terror in a truly global intellectual context.
The discussion of individual countries is placed in context through an examination of wider issues such as the future of al-Qaeda, the growing refugee problem, the effect on the world economy and a significant revisiting of our approaches to understanding international relations. Bush’s declaration of a ‘war on terror’ as the ‘first war of the twenty-first century.’ The contributors trace the reactions of individual governments and public opinion across North America, Europe, the Middle East, Africa and Asia to terrorism, the war in Afghanistan and Iraq. This text examines how the world has reacted to, and been affected by, September 11, the ensuing war in Afghanistan and President George W. The terrible attacks on September 11 and more recent atrocities in Russia, Indonesia, Kenya and Saudi Arabia have demonstrated that terrorism is a global threat to stability, democracy and prosperity.