1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910827483203321

Autore

Snow Donald M. <1943-, >

Titolo

Distant thunder : patterns of conflict in the developing world / / Donald M. Snow

Pubbl/distr/stampa

London ; ; New York : , : Routledge, , 2015

ISBN

1-315-70515-X

1-317-47299-3

Edizione

[2nd ed.]

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (241 p.)

Disciplina

ELECTRONIC BOOK

327.09048

Soggetti

Political violence - Developing countries

Insurgency - Developing countries

Terrorism - Developing countries

Developing countries Foreign relations

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Note generali

"First published 1997 by M.E. Sharpe"--t.p. verso.

Nota di contenuto

ch. 1. The changing face of violent conflict -- ch. 2. Second tier problems in a first tier-dominated world -- ch. 3. The venerable foe : insurgency -- ch. 4. The intractable nemesis : counterinsurgency -- ch. 5. New internal war -- ch. 6. The other challenges : counternarcotics, counterterrorism, and regional conflict -- ch. 7. Cases in point : Sendero Luminoso and restore hope -- ch. 8. Distant thunder or siren's call?

Sommario/riassunto

The main locu of instability, conflict and violence in the post-Cold War world is the periphery - particularly the poorest regions of what used to be called the Third World. Internal wars of secession, struggles for power and chaos in failed or failing states are the dominant forms, expressed in intercommunal or ethnic violence, domestic and international acts of terrorism, and, increasingly, essentially criminal insurgencies with no political objective. This completely revised edition of "Distant Thunder" brings the problem of Third-World conflict into the post-Cold War era. Now that the periphery is no longer the site of surrogate competitions between rival political-economic systems, when and how should the developed countries intervene in internal wars



outside the compass of their traditional geopolitical interest - and what can such intervention be realistically expected to accomplish? The new edition shows how secessionist and ethnic conflicts, terrorism and the drug trade fit into the context of international politics, examines the post-Cold War dynamics of political and economic decline, state failure, and the limits of interventionism, includes case studies of the Shining Path of Peru and its degeneration from a Maoist-type insurgency to a narco-terrorist ring and the Somali crisis as examples of the difficulties of international intervention in internal wars.