2024-03-29T13:16:34Z
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oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:155
2023-09-28T08:56:06Z
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http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0This thesis examines state-society relations in Egypt, and the logic of durable authoritarianism since 1952. It does so through an examination of the Egyptian state’s neglectful rule, from the 1970s through the 1990s, of its capital Cairo. In particular, the thesis focuses on state inaction vis-à-vis Cairo’s informal housing sector: those neighbourhoods established on land not officially sanctioned for urbanization.
The central research question of the thesis is to explain why the Egyptian state has been unable to intervene effectively in these informal neighbourhoods—despite their stigmatization in Egyptian public discourse as threats to the nation’s social, moral and political health; the authoritarian state’s considerable unilateral power; and the availability of western assistance for development interventions. The short answer to the question, is that the very factors which sustain the authoritarian political order constrain the Egyptian state’s ability to intervene in its capital. Neglectful rule is a consequence of the autocratic post-1952 dispensation of power.
That this neglect is not simply the result of structural resource constraints, is demonstrated through the examination of donor-funded urban-development projects—aimed at fostering an administratively competent Egyptian state able to intervene in its capital—none of which were successful or sustainable. The failure of these reform initiatives, which could have allowed Egyptian state agencies to upgrade informal Cairo and re-orient its growth, can be plausibly explained in terms of the challenges they posed to the logic of autocratic rule. Thus the reproduction of the informal city is, in part, a consequence of the post-1952 dispensation.application/pdfhttps://eprints.soas.ac.uk/155/1/Dorman_Politics_of_Neglect.pdfen4600TThe Politics of Neglect: the Egyptian State in Cairo, 1974-98Dorman, W. J.ThesisSMURhttp://doi.org/10.25501/SOAS.00000155
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:183
2024-02-09T13:46:14Z
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What is at stake, politically, in abandoning claims that one's actions are legitimized by some form of transcendent authority? Analysing this question moves us beyond human rights debates about foundationalism, and asks whether the efficacy of claims made by human rights advocates is undermined by their inability, conceptually and politically, to make the case that human rights are moral truths rather than a more temporal and secular doctrine. Through an analysis of Amnesty International and its ambivalent grounding in Kantian notions of morality, and by considering competing religious and national claims to authority, I assess whether or not human rights activism suffers from an inescapable political ineptitude that must eventually see it decline in the face of more ardent and politically effective authority claims.application/pdfhttps://eprints.soas.ac.uk/183/1/The_Politics_of_Moral_Authority%2C_20th_Sept_2007.pdfenSOAS Department of Politics and International Studies605085104600The Politics of Moral AuthorityHopgood, Stephen2007-09MonographAO
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2024-02-09T13:48:45Z
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application/pdfhttps://eprints.soas.ac.uk/977/1/as.2003.43.1.pdfenUniversity of California Press1533838X85104600India in 2002: The BJP’s Faltering Mandate and the Morphology of Nuclear WarSaez, Lawrence2003-01Journal Article/ReviewNAhttp://doi.org/10.1525/as.2003.43.1.186
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application/pdfhttps://eprints.soas.ac.uk/978/1/as.2004.44.1.pdfenUniversity of California Press1533838X85104600India in 2003: Pre-Electoral Maneuvering and the Prospects for Regional PeaceSaez, Lawrence2004-01Journal Article/ReviewAOhttp://doi.org/10.1525/as.2004.44.1.23
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2022-08-31T18:35:14Z
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enSpringer Nature0888723385104600The Deregulation of State-Owned Enterprises in India and ChinaSaez, LawrenceYang, Joy2001-09Journal Article/ReviewNAhttp://doi.org/10.1057/ces.2001.14
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2022-07-01T10:48:26Z
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enTampere Peace Research Institute978951706199585104600Composing Africa: Civil Society and its DiscontentsChan, Stephen2002BookNA
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2022-07-20T07:46:26Z
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The new millennium can only be a time of true globalization if different histories and systems of understanding the world are appreciated. The authors unveil significant studies to do with epistemological debates in International Relations, and give detailed middle and far-eastern examples of how different cultures have used story-telling as a means of understanding what is outside and around. Especially provocative is the Chinese idea of the West as an 'Other', as atypical and, indeed, inscrutable, to the extent of not needing scrutiny at all.enPalgrave Macmillan97803336882294600The Zen of International RelationsChan, StephenMandaville, Peter2001otherNAhttp://doi.org/10.1057/9780230286429
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2022-08-08T10:20:07Z
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enTaylor and Francis0413659785104600The Memory of Violence: trauma in the writings of Alexander Kanengoni and Yvonne Vera and the idea of unreconciled citizenship in ZimbabweChan, StephenQadir, Shahid2005Journal Article/ReviewNAhttp://doi.org/10.1080/0143659042000339164
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2022-10-04T18:44:53Z
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enTaylor and Francis0035853385104600An Ornithology of Secretaries-General: The Commonwealth and its LeadershipChan, Stephen2005Journal Article/ReviewNAhttp://doi.org/10.1080/00358530500175017
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2021-06-03T09:56:25Z
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George Bush's "Axis of Evil" was the expression of a new rhetoric of morality in world affairs, mirroring the ideology of the president and his neoconservative policy advisors. In its fight against evil, the U.S. has economically and politically broken the Soviet Union, waged war against Afghanistan, toppled the Taliban regime, confronted Al-Qaeda, and threatened Syria, Iran, and Northern Korea. But what is this notion of "evil," which has become part of the language of international politics? What are its historical origins and its moral, political, and legal foundations? Is the fight against evil merely a new form of imperialism? In this powerful new book, Stephen Chan tackles the notion of evil in international relations and warns against its potency as a tool for policy makers. The war of ideas is closely examined and its practical and political implications—from Francis Fukuyama's The End of History and the Last Man to Samuel Huntington's The Clash of Civilizations and the Remaking of World Order to Robert Kagan's Of Paradise and Power—are given close critical attention. The greatest danger in combating what is broadly defined as evil, Chan concludes, lies in a failure to grasp its nuanced nature in favor of attempts to vanquish it with unprecedented might.enUniversity of Michigan Press978047203085985104600Out of Evil: New International Politics and Old Doctrines of WarChan, Stephen2005BookNAhttp://doi.org/10.3998/mpub.131944
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2018-06-22T15:53:41Z
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2018-06-22T15:53:41Z
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2022-08-10T20:54:03Z
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enTaylor and Francis1360082685104600A New Triptych for International Relations in the 21st Century: Beyond Waltz And Beyond Lacan's Antigone, with a Note on the Falun Gong Of ChinaChan, Stephen2003Journal Article/ReviewNAhttp://doi.org/10.1080/1360082032000069082
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:2846
2018-06-22T15:53:41Z
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2022-12-09T21:21:00Z
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enRowman and Littlefield97807425287274600Kazakhstan in 2002Dave, BhavnaKaratnycki, A2003Book chapterNA
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2022-12-16T17:50:42Z
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enRowman and Littlefield (with Freedom House)Nations in Transit 2005: Democratization from Central Europe to Eurasia4600Annual Review (review for the year 2004)Dave, BhavnaGoehring, JeannetteSchnetzer, Amanda2005otherNA
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:2849
2022-09-24T09:58:45Z
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enWiley135450784600Entitlement through Numbers: Nationality and Language Categories in the First Post-Soviet Census of KazakhstanDave, Bhavna2004Journal Article/ReviewNAhttp://doi.org/10.1111/j.1354-5078.2004.00176.x
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2022-05-26T07:11:07Z
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enCornell University Press97808014415164600The Shrinking Reach of the State: Language Policy and Implementation in Kazakhstan and KyrgyzstanDave, BhavnaJones, Pauline2004Book chapterNA
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2022-09-27T12:51:10Z
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enTaylor and Francis107582164600Kazakhstan's 2004 Parliamentary Elections : Managing Loyalty and Support for the RegimeDave, Bhavna2005Journal Article/ReviewNAhttp://doi.org/10.1080/10758216.2005.11052189
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2022-07-25T13:24:08Z
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en4600Analysis of Government Reforms in KyrgyzstanDave, Bhavna2003otherNA
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enFreedom House97807425364634600Kazakhstan - report for 2002Dave, BhavnaKaratnycki, AMotyl, AlexanderSchnetzer, Amanda2002Book chapterNA
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2018-06-22T15:53:42Z
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enNations in Transit 2004: Democratization from Central Europe to Eurasia4600annual review (review for the year 2003)Dave, BhavnaMotyl, AlexanderSchnetzer, Amanda2004otherNA
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en4600Minorities in KazakhstanDave, Bhavna2003otherNA
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2022-07-10T19:52:33Z
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Can capitalism and citizenship co-exist? In recent years advocates of the Third Way have championed the idea of public-spirited capitalism as the antidote to the many problems confronting the modern world. This book develops a multi-disciplinary theory of citizenship, exploring the human abilities needed for its practice. It then argues that capitalism impedes the nurturing of these abilities. In advancing these arguments, Kathryn Dean draws on the work of a wide range of thinkers including Freud, Marx, Lacan, Habermas and Castells.enRoutledge97804152727354600Capitalism and citizenship: the impossible partnershipDean, Kathryn2003BookNAhttp://doi.org/10.4324/9780203603246
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2018-06-22T15:53:42Z
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2021-12-19T10:13:13Z
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This introduction presents an overview of the key concepts discussed in the subsequent chapters of this book. The book offers an example of the most enthusiastic and vigorous espousal of western ideas of civilization and development. It aims to develop an Islamic economics that traces the way in which the foreign discourse infiltrates and subverts sophisticated attempts to evade it, since the very acceptance of a separate sphere of economics is the acceptance of a fundamental western cultural ‘item’. The book is concerned with the attempts of one Islamic intellectual to preserve an Islamic identity in the face of western intrusions of a capitalist kind. It provides quite a different account of the source and appeal of an identity politics nourished by consumerism and productive of the ‘post-bourgeois’ subject. The book looks at a politics of difference which is simultaneously coherent and fundamentally different from that which difference politics wishes to eliminate i.e. rights-based liberal democracy.enAshgate Publishing97811383321404600Introduction to Politics and the Ends of IdentityDean, KathrynDean, Kathryn1997Book chapterNA
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2022-09-20T07:12:30Z
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enOhio State University Press108807634600Capitalism, psychic immiseration, and decentred subjectivityDean, Kathryn2000Journal Article/ReviewNA
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enTaylor and Francis014023904600Taiwan and Japan's Foreign Relations: Virtual Diplomacy and Informal PoliticsDeans, PhilipZhao, Quansheng2001Journal Article/ReviewNAhttp://doi.org/10.1080/01402390108437859
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2022-07-10T18:31:39Z
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State Strategies in the Global Political Economy, Palan, Abbott and Deans argue that the state is not about to decline or ‘wither away’, but must restructure and evolve in response to forces of transnationalization. The state may be besieged but it can fight back and reorganize itself. The nature of this reorganization, the alleged shift from the welfare state to the ‘competition state’ is as much a response to changing global circumstances as it is an instrument of further change. The authors examine the plethora of competitive strategies adopted by the modern state: from the exclusive hegemonic strategies of the most powerful states to the parasitical strategies of the mini-states that serve as tax havens and flags of convenience; from the egalitarianism of the welfare policies of the Shielders to the repressed and exploited labour forces of ‘downworldly mobile’ Third World states; from the emerging continental economies of NAFTA and the EU to the utter dispair of collapsed states structurally unable to compete in the world economy. By investigating these strategic responses, the authors present a comprehensive study of the tactics and strategies employed by states to achieve greater stability and strength within the global political economy.enPinter97808264791674600State Strategies in the Global Political EconomyDeans, PhilipPalan, R1996BookNAhttp://doi.org/10.5040/9781474212939
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2022-09-07T21:03:00Z
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enTaylor and Francis135634674600The Challenge of DiversityDeans, Philip1998Journal Article/ReviewNAhttp://doi.org/10.1080/13563469808406372
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enKent Papers in Politics and International Relations4600The Diaoyutai Senkaku Dispute: The Unwanted ContoversyDeans, Philip1996otherNA
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enCentre d’études français sur la Chine contemporaine199646174600A Democracy Craving for Recognition: A Pessimistic View of the Impact of Democratisation on Taiwan's International StatusDeans, Philip2001Journal Article/ReviewNA
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2022-02-23T09:19:17Z
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For twenty years the issue of Taiwan defined Sino-Japanese relations. All interaction between Japan and China – political, economic or social – had to be understood and mediated through the fact of Japan’s formal diplomatic recognition of the Republic of China (on Taiwan) rather than the People’s Republic. Surveying the twenty-eight years that have passed since the Japanese government switched recognition, perhaps the most remarkable thing is how little Taiwan has been a source of conflict. The three governments involved have proved adept at managing the relationship and all three have shown a willingness to accommodate and compromise for their mutual benefit. The key to enabling the relationship has been the ability of Japan and Taiwan to utilise informal channels and networks to handle contact and communication, and the willingness of the PRC to tolerate this. However, although Beijing and Tokyo have shown a significant willingness to compromise and accommodate one another over the Taiwan question, the CCP has a bottom line over which it cannot compromise: the leadership of the PRC is unwilling, and perhaps unable, to tolerate any change in the Japanese government’s stance on the formal ‘oneChina policy’. This dictates that Japan must never assign any form of sovereignty to Taiwan, it must ensure that all contacts are informal/unofficial (or at least lowprofile) and that issues related to reunification are a matter solely for Beijing and Taipei. Furthermore, changes in the international system related to globalisation mean that the space in which informal ties exist is becoming increasingly codified and formalised, which puts growing pressure on the informal channels.enRoutledge97804152543114600The Taiwan Question: reconciling the irreconcilableDeans, PhilipSöderberg, Marie2002Book chapterNAhttp://doi.org/10.4324/9780203167137-14
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:2866
2022-05-26T07:07:00Z
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enKeesings WorldwideKeesings Annual Register4600China, Taiwan and Hong KongDeans, Philip2001Book chapterNA
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:2867
2022-09-30T10:11:21Z
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enTaylor and Francis030718474600Bush's China Policy: Understanding the First 100 DaysDeans, Philip2001Journal Article/ReviewNAhttp://doi.org/10.1080/03071840108446657
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2022-09-12T19:49:18Z
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enSage096701064600Contending Nationalisms and the Diaoyutai/Senkaku DisputesDeans, Philip2000Journal Article/ReviewNAhttp://doi.org/10.1177/0967010600031001010
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:2869
2022-05-26T07:06:38Z
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enKeesings WorldwideKeesings Annual Register4600China, Taiwan and Hong KongDeans, Philip2002Book chapterNA
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:2870
2022-07-25T07:27:44Z
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en4600New Challenges in Sino-Japanese relationsDeans, Philip2005Conference Paper/Proceeding/AbstractNA
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:2871
2021-12-31T09:26:18Z
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enKeesing's Worldwide LLC97818869944614600The PRC, Taiwan and Hong KongDeans, PhilipLewis, D. S.Clifton, Laura2002Book chapterNA
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:2872
2022-05-26T07:01:56Z
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enGreenwood97802759802144600The Internet in the People's Republic of China: censorship and participationDeans, PhilipAbbott, J2005Book chapterNA
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2022-03-24T09:02:54Z
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enMitteilungen des Instituts fur Asienkunde97838891031614600Cross-straits relations since 1949: from radicalism to conservatism and back againDeans, PhilipSchucher, GunterSchueller, Margot2005Book chapterNA
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2023-03-07T12:00:20Z
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Postage stamps issued by the government of the Republic of China (ROC) on Taiwan provide a useful tool for considering changing elite aspirations and political objectives. Stamps issued on Taiwan while under authoritarian rule frequently sought to demonstrate or bolster the legitimacy of the ruling KMT, typically through demonstrating the ROC's status in international society or through portraying the economic and developmental success of the KMT regime. The on-going democratic transition on Taiwan has seen a move away from stamps as mechanisms for domestic regime legitimation. Since the election of President Chen Shui-bian of the Democratic Progressive Party in 2000 stamps have increasingly become a medium for promoting the idea of a ‘Taiwanese’ identity distinct from that of ‘China’.enSpringer Nature109668384600Isolation, Identity and Taiwanese Stamps as Vehicles for Regime LegitimationDeans, Philip2005Journal Article/ReviewNAhttp://doi.org/10.1007/s12140-005-0007-5
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:2875
2023-03-07T12:00:20Z
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enSpringer Nature109668384600East Asian Postage Stamps as Socio-Political ArtefactsDeans, PhilipDobson, Hugo2005Journal Article/ReviewNAhttp://doi.org/10.1007/s12140-005-0006-6
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:2876
2021-12-29T09:36:37Z
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Nationalism and national self-assertion have been core values of the Chinese Communist Party throughout its history and also represent a key narrative of Chinese history in the 20th century, although the social bases from which the nationalism derives and the manner in which this nationalism is expressed have changed over time. From the 1990s onwards, the party-state's prefferred discourse on nationalism has been couched in terms of patriotism, while a popular nationalism has emerged, which at times goes beyond and challenges that of the party-state. The implications of this are addressed in the present paper wiht regard to the PRC's relations with Taiwan and Japan and with regard to the debate on ideology and Asian Values. It is argued that rising popular nationalism increasingly challenges state autonomy in the first two areas, but tends to be supportive of the state with regard to the third.enDepartment of Asian Studies139541994600Nationalism and National Self Assertion in the People's Republic of China: State Patriotism versus Popular Nationalism?Deans, Philip2005Journal Article/ReviewNAhttp://doi.org/10.22439/cjas.v21i0.39
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2021-12-29T09:36:18Z
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enGIGA German Institute of Global and Area Studies186810264600Cross-straits relations since 1949: from radicalism to conservatism and back againDeans, Philip2005Journal Article/ReviewNA
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:2878
2022-07-25T07:24:58Z
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en4600Asian regionalismsDeans, Philip2005Conference Paper/Proceeding/AbstractNA
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:2879
2022-05-25T21:19:00Z
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enFrank Cass97807146525974600Taiwan and Japan's Foreign Relations: Virtual Diplomacy and Informal PoliticsDeans, PhilipZhao, Quansheng2002Book chapterNA
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:2880
2022-07-25T07:28:07Z
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en4600Yasukuni re-visitedDeans, Philip2005Conference Paper/Proceeding/AbstractNA
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:2881
2022-06-27T07:33:03Z
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enFrank Cass97807146507154600Turkish Foreign Policy 1774-2000Hale, William2000BookNA
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:2882
2022-10-04T09:19:26Z
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enTaylor and Francis146838494600Human Rights, The European Union and the Turkish Accession ProcessHale, William2003Journal Article/ReviewNAhttp://doi.org/10.1080/714005714
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:2883
2022-05-25T21:02:18Z
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enFrank Cass97807146833554600Human Rights, the European Union and the Turkish Accession ProcessHale, WilliamCarkoglu, ARubin, B2003Book chapterNA
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:2884
2021-12-26T11:01:46Z
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enEothen. UK97809067193364600Democracy and the Party System in TurkeyHale, WilliamBeeley, Brian2002Book chapterNA
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:2885
2022-06-27T07:33:53Z
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enFrank Cass97807146507154600Turkish Foreign Policy 1774-2000Hale, William2002BookNA
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:2886
2022-05-25T20:25:37Z
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enLytnne Rienner97815558795494600Turkey and the European Union: the Long Road to MembershipHale, WilliamAvci, GRubin, BKiirisci, K2001Book chapterNA
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:2887
2022-03-28T07:59:00Z
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enOxford University Press97801982909954600TurkeyHale, WilliamSayigh, YezidShlaim, Avi1997Book chapterNA
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:2888
2022-07-11T08:40:49Z
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enLondon Middle East Institute (UK)4600Turkey, the United States and IraqHale, William2005BookNA
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2022-05-25T20:11:10Z
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enWashington Institute for Near East Policy97809440294354600Turkey: Economic Issues and Foreign PolicyHale, WilliamMakovsky, Alan2000Book chapterNA
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:2890
2021-12-22T10:37:55Z
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Soon after the end of the Cold War and the break-up of the USSR, Turkey's potential role in the transformed environment of Central Asia, Transcaucasia and the Balkans began to attract the attention of Western journalists, diplomats and scholars. Turkey, it was often pointed out, was the strongest state in the region, it had a fast-growing market economy and a reasonably stable and democratic political system. It was also a long-standing ally of the West. Moreover, Turkish interests, particularly in the predominantly Muslim republics of the former USSR, converged with those of the Western powers, in that both sought to promote political and economic liberalization, to pre sent a more moderate form of Islam, and to prevent the incursion of fundamentalist Islam, assumed to be sponsored by Iran. As a Muslim nation, with strong linguistic and other cultural links with most of the peoples of the region, Turkey, it was further argued, could serve as their bridge to the West, and a successful example of what it was hoped the new republics would become. 1
Three years later, the optimism has faded. Most of the ex-Soviet republics have made few advances towards stable democratic politics or expanding market economies - in fact, in many cases, the movement has been backwards rather than forwards. Several of them are faced with continuing interstate wars, or debilitating civil strife. Transcaucasia stands out as an acute example of this saga of wasted opportunities. The economies of all three states in the region have steadily deteriorated, even since the disintegration of the USSR. Georgia is still wracked by internal conflict, the war between Azerbaijan and the Armenians has dragged on, and Azerbaijan's first democratically elected president has been overthrown by a virtual coup d'etat which was probably supported by revisionists in Moscow. The Turks have been very active in attempting to expand their economic and cultural role but, like the other nations involved there, they have not yet been able to make much impact on a generally depressing and chaotic situation.enFrank Cass97807146412944600Turkey and TranscaucasiaHale, WilliamMenashri, David1998Book chapterNAhttp://doi.org/10.4324/9781315037493-12
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2022-07-25T11:27:10Z
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en4600Assessment of Probative Documents Relevant to Prosecution of Senior Leaders and Others Most Responsible for 'Khmer Rouge' CrimesHeder, Stephen2005otherNA
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:2892
2022-05-25T19:45:49Z
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enPolicy Exchange97818427508654600Cambodia (1990-98): The Regime Didn't ChangeHeder, StephenGough, R2003Book chapterNA
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2021-12-28T09:40:36Z
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enInstitute of Southeast Asian Studies97898123012844600Dealing With Crimes Against Humanity: Illusion or Progress?Heder, Stephen2001Book chapterNA
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:2894
2018-06-22T15:53:43Z
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:2895
2018-06-22T15:53:44Z
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:2896
2022-07-14T09:36:18Z
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enGendai Jinbun-sha97848779826524600カンボジア大虐殺は裁けるか : クメール・ルージュ国際法廷への道 = Kanbojia daigyakusatsu wa sabakeruka : Kumēru rūju kokusai hōtei eno michiHeder, StephenTittemore, Brian2005BookNA
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:2897
2022-07-25T13:39:54Z
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en4600The 2003 Elections in Kampung Cham: Monitoring ReportHeder, Stephen2003otherNA
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:2898
2022-07-25T12:18:02Z
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en4600Legal Analysis of Testimonies Gathered by the Documentation Centre of Cambodia, With Summary TranslationsHeder, Stephen2004otherNA
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:2899
2022-05-25T19:07:22Z
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enExperts for Community Research (Cambodia)97890806918104600Cambodian Elections in Historical PerspectiveHeder, StephenVijghen, J2002Book chapterNA
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:2900
2022-07-25T11:17:05Z
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en4600Applicability of Command and Individual Responsibility and Joint Criminal Enterprise Doctrine to Senior Leaders and Others Most Responsible 'Khmer Rouge' CrimesHeder, Stephen2005otherNA
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:2901
2022-05-05T19:21:56Z
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enNorthern Illinois University Press (US)97818911342344600Hun Sen and Genocide Trials in Cambodia: International Impacts, Impunity, and JusticeHeder, StephenLedgerwood, Judy2002Book chapterNA
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:2902
2022-07-25T11:30:53Z
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en4600Chain of Command Responsibility for the Murder of Christopher Howes: Perpetrators and WitnessesHeder, Stephen2005otherNA
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:2903
2022-07-01T11:05:43Z
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enWhite Lotus97897448004354600Cambodian Communism and the Vietnamese Model: Imitation and Independence, 1930-1975Heder, Stephen2003BookNA
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:2904
2018-06-22T15:53:44Z
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:2905
2022-09-25T10:48:17Z
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enTaylor and Francis0967828X4600Racism, Marxism, Labelling, and Genocide in Ben Kiernan's The Pol Pot RegimeHeder, Stephen1997Journal Article/ReviewNAhttp://doi.org/10.1177/0967828X9700500202
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:2906
2022-02-24T13:40:46Z
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On 23 October 1991, Party of Democratic Kampuchea (PDK) I President Khieu Samphan and Vice-President Son Sen signed the Agreements on a Comprehensive Political Settlement of the Cambodia Conjlict. 2 In so doing, the PDK facade for the covertly communist leadership group headed by Pol Pot, Nuon Chea, and Ta Mok3 committed it to a cease-fire, to demobilization of at least 70 percent of its regular and guerilla armed forces, known as the National Army of Democratic Kampuchea (NADK), and to disarmament and cantonment (confinement to barracks) of the remaining 30 percent. It also agreed to participate in "free and fair elections" organized by the United Nations Transitional Authority in Cambodia (UNT AC) to select a constituent assembly that would write a new constitution for Cambodia, transform itself into a national assembly, and set up new government. In short, the PDK and its behind-the-scenes leaders committed themselves to giving up armed struggle in favor of peaceful political struggle via the parliamentary route.enM E Sharpe97815632466474600The Resumption of Armed Struggle by the Party of Democratic KampucheaHeder, StephenHeder, StephenLedgerwood, Judy1996Book chapterNA
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2022-05-25T18:48:54Z
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enMellen Press97807734760044600Class, Nation and Race in Communist Crimes Against Humanity: Theoretical and Historical Reflections on Marxist Racism and ViolenceHeder, StephenKiminyi, AScott, O2001Book chapterNA
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:2908
2022-08-07T13:32:33Z
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enSage03058298605085104600Reading the Small Print in Global Civil Society: The Inexorable Hegemony of the Liberal SelfHopgood, Stephen2000Journal Article/ReviewNAhttp://doi.org/10.1177/03058298000290010601
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:2909
2018-06-22T15:53:44Z
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:2910
2018-06-22T15:53:44Z
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:2911
2018-06-22T15:53:44Z
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:2912
2022-07-10T18:28:18Z
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In an increasingly interdependent world, marked by growing numbers of non-governmental organizations and international institutions, this book presents a powerful argument for the continued relevance of the state to our understanding of international relations. Drawing on detailed primary research, the book examines the key role central state officials have played in formulating American foreign environmental policy, and concludes that claims for the diminishing domestic-international divide, and the erosion of state sovereignty are overstated. Nonetheless, in arguing forcefully that the focus for explanation should lie with politics inside the institutions of state, the book rejects Realist, Pluralist, and Marxist accounts of foreign-policy making. This state-centric focus allows for domestic and international factors to play a role at the same time as stressing that, in foreign environmental politics at least, the state remains the dominant policy-making institution.enOxford University Press9780198292593605085104600American Foreign Environmental Policy and the Power of the StateHopgood, Stephen1998BookNAhttp://doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780198292593.001.0001
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2022-12-08T19:17:19Z
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enAmerican Academy of Arts and Sciences001152664600Modernity and Politics in IndiaKaviraj, Sudipta2000Journal Article/ReviewNA
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:2914
2022-08-04T13:31:59Z
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enSpringer Nature002217914600The sudden death of Sanskrit KnowledgeKaviraj, Sudipta2005Journal Article/ReviewNAhttp://doi.org/10.1007/s10781-004-9058-y
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2021-12-24T09:28:02Z
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enStanford University Press97808047451474600The ideas of freedom in modern IndiaKaviraj, SudiptaTaylor, Robert H.2002Book chapterNA
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2022-09-06T08:13:24Z
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enTaylor and Francis146643564600Religion and Identity in IndiaKaviraj, Sudipta1997Journal Article/ReviewNAhttp://doi.org/10.1080/01419870.1997.9993964
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2022-08-18T08:47:42Z
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enCambridge University Press0017257X4600The General Elections in IndiaKaviraj, Sudipta1997Journal Article/ReviewNAhttp://doi.org/10.1111/j.1477-7053.1997.tb01206.x
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2022-07-02T08:35:48Z
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enDuke University Press089923634600Filth and the Public Sphere: Concepts and Practices about Space in CalcuttaKaviraj, Sudipta1997Journal Article/ReviewNAhttp://doi.org/10.1215/08992363-10-1-83
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2022-05-25T18:36:13Z
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enRoskilde University97887734954694600Reading a song of the cityKaviraj, SudiptaKaarsholm, P2002Book chapterNA
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2022-05-05T18:49:53Z
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enStanford University Press978081223874785104600Palestinian Refugees in Lebanon and the Right of ReturnKhalili, LalehLustick, Ian S.Lesch, Ann2005Book chapterNA
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:2921
2018-06-22T15:53:45Z
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:2922
2021-12-28T10:07:56Z
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enMiddle East Research and Information Project0899285185104600Landscapes of Uncertainty: Palestinians in LebanonKhalili, Laleh2005Journal Article/ReviewNA
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2022-10-07T07:23:29Z
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enDuke University Press1089201X85104600Places of Mourning and Memory: Palestinian Commemoration in the Refugee Camps of LebanonKhalili, Laleh2005Journal Article/ReviewNAhttp://doi.org/10.1215/1089201X-25-1-30
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2018-06-22T15:53:45Z
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:2925
2022-05-25T13:49:07Z
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enILAS97819000395124600Politics, the State and Business in the Democratic Transition of South KoreaKong, Tat YanAmann, EChang, Ha-Joon2003Book chapterNA
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2022-09-10T07:20:51Z
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enWiley026550124600Corruption and its Institutional Foundations: The Experience of South KoreaKong, Tat Yan1996Journal Article/ReviewNAhttp://doi.org/10.1111/j.1759-5436.1996.mp27002007.x
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2022-05-25T09:06:11Z
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enPalgrave Macmillan97813492514144600Democratization and Its Aftermath: Transition and Continuity in South KoreaKong, Tat YanKim, Dae HwanKong, Tat Yan1997Book chapterNAhttp://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-25141-4_5
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2022-08-18T08:46:51Z
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enCambridge University Press0017257X4600Power Alternation in South KoreaKong, Tat Yan2000Journal Article/ReviewNAhttp://doi.org/10.1111/1477-7053.00033
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This comprehensive and authoritative account of the development of the Korean economy combines an historical approach with a substantial treatment of the new economy. Its fresh analysis of the recent transition and systematic treatment of labour issues represent a significant contribution to the scholarship on the politics of development. It is an essential resource for students of comparative political economy and East Asian development.enRoutledge97804151450394600The Politics of Economic Reform in South Korea. A Fragile MiracleKong, Tat Yan2000BookNAhttp://doi.org/10.4324/9781315004938
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