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Emerging mechanisms of global governance require specific models of conflict resolution in peripheral regions. These models lack impact in the institutions and practices at the centre of long-standing regional conflicts. The Cambodian elections in 1993 and 1998 exemplify this failure.
List of Figures Acknowledgements List of Abbreviations Maps Introduction PART I: THEORETICAL REMARKS: THE NATURE OF CONFLICT AND PEACE The Paris Plan and its Failure Towards a New Explanation of the Collapse of the Paris Plan Peace in the Post-Cold War Order PART II: THE 1993 ELECTIONS: PEACE AS NEW SOCIAL…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Emerging mechanisms of global governance require specific models of conflict resolution in peripheral regions. These models lack impact in the institutions and practices at the centre of long-standing regional conflicts. The Cambodian elections in 1993 and 1998 exemplify this failure.
List of Figures Acknowledgements List of Abbreviations Maps Introduction PART I: THEORETICAL REMARKS: THE NATURE OF CONFLICT AND PEACE The Paris Plan and its Failure Towards a New Explanation of the Collapse of the Paris Plan Peace in the Post-Cold War Order PART II: THE 1993 ELECTIONS: PEACE AS NEW SOCIAL CONTRACT Tous Les Chemins Ménent a Paris The Paris Plan L'Après-UNTAC PART III: BEYOND THE 1993 ELECTIONS: TOWARDS A NEW MODEL OF INTERNATIONAL CONFLICT RESOLUTION A New Explanation of the Failure of the Paris Plan The Lessons of the Cambodian Peace Process Thinking about Peace in the Emerging Global Order PART IV: THE 1988 ELECTIONS: GLOBAL GOVERNANCE AND THE FAILURE OF INTERNATIONAL CONFLICT RESOLUTION The Dynamics of the 1998 Elections Global Governance and the Nature of International Conflict Resolution Notes Bibliography Index
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Autorenporträt
PIERRE P. LIZEÉ Brock University, St Catherines, Ontario, Canada. He co-edited, with Amitav Acharya and Sorpong Peou, Cambodia,’ The 1989 Paris Peace Conference’.