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The purpose of this book is to give an accurate and scholarly assessment of a major international crisis, and to contribute to public understanding of the decisions and processes that brought about the crisis. Calvert deals with the nature and history of the Falkland Islands, the grounds for the competing claims, the political background and events in both Argentina and Britain that led up to the crisis, and the unfolding events of the crisis itself, in its political, diplomatic and military aspects. He concludes with a substantial assessment of the impact of the crisis on international politics.
Peter Calvert was Professor Emeritus of Comparative and International Politics at the University of Southampton, UK.
1. ‘An Island Thrown Aside From Human Use’2. Argentina – the Decision to Invade3. Britain – the Decision to Respond4. Negotiating From Strength5. Negotiating the Non-Negotiable6. Consequences of a CrisisAppendix: Security Council Resolution 502Notes Index
Margot Light, A.J.R. Groom, UK) Light, Margot (Professor, London School of Economics and Political Science, UK) Groom, A.J.R. (University of Kent, A. J. R. Groom
András Bozóki, András Körösényi, George Schöpflin, Hungary) Bozoki, Andras (Central European University, Hungary) Korosenyi, Andras (Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Belgium) Schopflin, George (European Parliament