Chapter 1 Comparing Costs of Prevention and the Costs of Conflict: Toward a New Methodology Part 2 Failed Prevention Chapter 3 Bosnia Chapter 4 Rwanda Chapter 5 Somalia Chapter 6 Haiti Chapter 7 The Persian Gulf Part 8 Initial Prevention Chapter 9 Macedonia Chapter 10 Slovakia Chapter 11 Mid-Course Prevention Chapter 12 Cambodia Chapter 13 El Salvador Chapter 14 The Case for Conflict Prevention
Michael E. Brown is associate professor and director of research for the National Security Studies Program at the Edmund A. Walsh School of Foreign Service, Georgetown University. Richard N. Rosecrance is professor of political science and director of the Center for International Relations at the University of California, Los Angeles.
Tightly argued, well-illustrated, eminently readable. The authors
confront head-on the main methodological problem, how one can
foresee a developing conflict situation in time to take preventive
measures.
*Sir Michael Howard, president, International Institute for
Strategic Studies*
Excellent scholarship, outstanding selection of cases, and well
written. The issues are handled extraordinarily well and the
analytical framework is applied scientifically and rigorously. This
book will make an important contribution toward what will be a
continuing critical debate in the years to come.
*Lawrence J. Korb, Center for Public Policy Education, The
Brookings Institution*
Brown and Rosecrance's edited volume is a model of structured,
focused comparison across a range of case studies. The
distinguished authors analyze a variety of cases of recent domestic
and international conflicts. In addition to its exercise in
hypothesis testing, the book offers a valuable set of case
histories, complete with maps and extensive documentation. Highly
recommended for upper-division udergraduates and above.
*CHOICE*
Crisply and clearly written. This volume advances the debate on
conflict prevention by focusing on concrete costs and benefits.
*Thomas G. Weiss*
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