1st Edition

US-Indonesian Hegemonic Bargaining Strength of Weakness

By Timo Kivimäki Copyright 2003
308 Pages
by Routledge

308 Pages
by Routledge

616 Pages
by Routledge

Title first published in 2003. Following the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001 and October 12, 2002 in the United States and on Bali, we may be witnessing the most sweeping shift in US foreign policy since the beginning of the cold war. America is again committed to leading the world in a battle against a global enemy. The US relationship with Indonesia - the country with the world’s largest... Read more
Contents: Introduction; The negotiations; Research design; Bargaining during hegemonic transition; Bargaining during integral hegemony; Emerging challenge to the hegemonic order; Second phase of hegemonic decline; Bargaining during minimal hegemony; Post-hegemonic bargaining; Conclusions: strength of weakness; References; Annexes; Index.

Biography

Dr. Timo Kivimäki has been professor of the University of Helsinki, Copenhagen and Lapland, and the Director of the Nordic Institute of Asian Studies (University of Copenhagen) and the Institute of Asian Studies (University of Helsinki). He has also been a frequent adviser to the Finnish, Danish, Dutch, Russian, Indonesian and Swedish governments, as well as to several UN and EU organizations on conflict and peace negotiation. Dr. Kivimäki’s latest book, Can Peace Research Make Peace? was published by Ashgate in 2012.

'Kivimäki's study is the result of meticulous research into all available public and private sources, combined into an illuminating analysis of asymmetric bargaining that makes an important contribution to foreign policy and negotiation literature. In addition, it is an exciting story.' Dr I. William Zartman, Johns Hopkins University, USA '...offers an in-depth analysis of the strengths of and limits on Indonesian bargaining in its bilateral relations with the USA...rich in detail and reflects very considerable research.' Journal of Peace Research 'The author should be commended for intensive research and extensive interviews with important players in the "bargaining" process.' USI Journal