Overview
- Editors:
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Jan Melissen
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University of Leicester, UK
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Table of contents (13 chapters)
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Front Matter
Pages i-xxiii
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Reflections on the New Global Diplomacy: Statecraft 2500 bc to 2000 ad
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Diplomacy in a World of Change
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The Media and IT
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Front Matter
Pages 133-133
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- Christer Jönsson, Karin Aggestam
Pages 151-170
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Unorthodox Diplomacy
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Front Matter
Pages 193-193
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- G. R. Berridge, Nadia Gallo
Pages 214-230
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Back Matter
Pages 251-267
About this book
The way in which states are dealing with one another has changed more in the past decades than in the 350 years since the Peace of Westphalia. This accessible volume supplements the analyses of more familiar topics in the introductory literature on diplomacy. Experts from nine countries examine some of the ways in which diplomatic practice after 1945 has adapted to fundamental changes in international relations, or is still trying to come to terms with them. This book gives insights into a transforming diplomatic landscape and the changing forms and modalities of contemporary diplomacy.
Editors and Affiliations
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University of Leicester, UK
Jan Melissen
About the editor
KARIN AGGESTAM Research Assistant, University of Kent
DAVID ARMSTRONG Professor of Politics, University of Durham
MARTIN BELL Centre of Diplomatic Studies, University of Leicester
G. R. BERRIDGE Director of the Centre for the Study of Diplomacy, University of Leicester
RAYMOND COHEN Professor and head of the Department of International Relations, Hebrew University, Jerusalem
NADIA GALLO Research Assistant, Centre for the Study of Diplomacy, University of Leicester
BRIAN HOCKING Professor in International Relations and Director of the Centre for International and European studies at Coventry University
CHRISTER JÖNSSON Professor of Political Science, Lund University, Sweden
JOVAN KURBALIJA Head of Information Technology and Diplomacy, Mediterranean Academy of Diplomatic Studies, Malta
HELEN LEIGH-PHIPPARD Lecturer in International Relations in University of Sussex
PAUL W. MEERTS Deputy-Director, Netherlands Institute of International Relations
FRANÇOISE MENGIN Researcher at the Foundation Nationale des Sciences Politiques, Paris
MARIE MULLER Professor of International Relations and Head of the Department of Political Sciences, University of Pretoria
GARY D. RAWNSLEY Lecturer in the Department of Politics, University of Nottingham.
NADIM N. ROUHANA Associate Professor, University of Massachusetts, Boston