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Unsettled States, Disputed Lands - (The Wilder House Politics, History and Culture) by Ian S Lustick (Paperback)
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Highlights
- A pathbreaking study carried out over a decade and a half analyzing the processes, policies, and factors involved when states incorporate additional territories, and when they relinquish control over territories.
- About the Author: Ian S. Lustick is Richard L. Simon Professor in the Social Sciences at the University of Pennsylvania.
- 576 Pages
- Freedom + Security / Law Enforcement, International
- Series Name: The Wilder House Politics, History and Culture
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Book Synopsis
A pathbreaking study carried out over a decade and a half analyzing the processes, policies, and factors involved when states incorporate additional territories, and when they relinquish control over territories. The initial impetus for the analysis was the relationship of Israel and the West Bank aReview Quotes
Ian Lustick... has written a valuable study concerning the changing relationship of Britain to Ireland (1834-1922); France to Algeria (1936-62) and Israel to the West Bank/Gaza (since 1967). This richly detailed and thoroughly documented book can be read on a number of different levels and therefore has much to offer to a wide variety of audiences.
--Robert Bookmiller "Middle East Policy"In a major study that moves between path-breaking theorizing and analysis that is relevant to today's headlines, the author examines the process by which states expand and contract.... He develops a useful model of state expansion and contraction, focusing on how the issue of incorporating outlying territories is dealt with in the political arena.... While written before the recent Israeli-PLO agreement, this book has been made more, not less, timely by events that could only be guessed at when the author was writing this stimulating, often difficult, but ultimately very rewarding study.
-- "Foreign Affairs"About the Author
Ian S. Lustick is Richard L. Simon Professor in the Social Sciences at the University of Pennsylvania.