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Civil War Interventions and Their Benefits

Autor Isaac M. Castellano
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 29 aug 2016
The 2013 debate over whether the United States should intervene in the Syrian conflict raised important questions regarding the benefits countries receive when they intervene in civil wars, and how those benefits are distributed to the citizens of the intervening country. To address these lingering questions this book offers readers a comprehensive examination of the intervention process, examining the decision to intervene, what motivates states, and how their intervention shapes the conflict process. Most, importantly, the book examines how states benefit from their interventions and the distribution of intervenor benefits. Specially two questions are addressed: What are the benefits of intervention for intervening countries? And, how are benefits distributed within the intervenors society? Using evidence compiled from three case studies (El Salvador, The Philippines, and Sri Lanka), this book examines what motivated states to intervene, how they intervened, what they got from their intervention, and how the benefits of the intervention were distributed among the public. Arguing that foreign policy and security decision making is isolated from the general public, this book argues that citizens gain little from indirect interventions into civil wars.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781498507097
ISBN-10: 1498507093
Pagini: 200
Ilustrații: 8 tables, 9 graphs
Dimensiuni: 316 x 163 x 19 mm
Greutate: 0.27 kg
Editura: Rowman & Littlefield

Notă biografică

Isaac Castellano teaches political science at Boise State University and the College of Western Idaho.

Descriere

Castellano argues that indirect interventions by external states into civil wars are the product of elite control over security making and that those interventions return few public goods to the general public they represent.