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interdependence
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Journal Article
Mediterranean Quarterly (2015) 26 (2): 80–98.
Published: 01 June 2015
...James M. Quirk Norman Angell and Alfred Thayer Mahan were two of the leading thinkers on pre–World War I “interdependence,” offering competing lessons on the changes in technology, economics, and security. At different times during the twentieth century, each one’s ideas seemed to best explain...
Journal Article
Mediterranean Quarterly (2017) 28 (2): 106–124.
Published: 01 June 2017
... and Turkey.”
116 Mediterranean Quarterly: June 2017
Turkey’s Relations with Azerbaijan and Georgia
Relations between and among Turkey, Azerbaijan, and Georgia can be char-
acterized by mutual interdependence. Overlapping strategic interests and
geographic proximity among them has enabled...
Journal Article
Mediterranean Quarterly (2001) 12 (2): 101–118.
Published: 01 June 2001
..., and other difficulties it caused in neighboring countries,
the recent and ongoing crisis in Yugoslavia was largely contained within its
own borders.
Sensing that their destinies are interdependent, and inspired by their own
peoples’ yearning for a better...
Journal Article
Mediterranean Quarterly (2001) 12 (2): 119–122.
Published: 01 June 2001
...-twentieth-century global
interdependence. Although Sadat did not outlive the Cold War, he grasped immediately
upon his official ascension to Egypt’s presidency in October 1970 that the United States
was, already at that point, the world’s only superpower, albeit within...
Journal Article
Mediterranean Quarterly (2001) 12 (2): 123–126.
Published: 01 June 2001
... hard work to bring Egypt out of the throes of
decolonization into the much more demanding realm of late-twentieth-century global
interdependence. Although Sadat did not outlive the Cold War, he grasped immediately
upon his official ascension to Egypt’s presidency...
Journal Article
Mediterranean Quarterly (2001) 12 (2): 127–130.
Published: 01 June 2001
...-twentieth-century global
interdependence. Although Sadat did not outlive the Cold War, he grasped immediately
upon his official ascension to Egypt’s presidency in October 1970 that the United States
was, already at that point, the world’s only superpower, albeit within...
Journal Article
Mediterranean Quarterly (2008) 19 (4): 68–80.
Published: 01 December 2008
... advancement and interdependence enhanced
by collective security mechanisms.23 At the economic level, zones of peace
feature wealth, industrialization, and a market economy, while politically they
consist of democracies. As a typical example of this, Singer and Wildavsky
suggest, inter alia...
Journal Article
Mediterranean Quarterly (2012) 23 (3): 82–97.
Published: 01 September 2012
... and responding to humani-
tarian crises within a new normative framework that involved partnership
with the international community.”5 He was later instrumental in forming the
Kampala Document, which contained a strong statement of interdependence:
“the security of one African country’s population had...
Journal Article
Mediterranean Quarterly (2003) 14 (2): 21–45.
Published: 01 June 2003
... often place stress on the
security of the individual. Thus, environmental and human security often
coexist in a complicated interdependence best conceptually considered as
extended security.
Policy makers would be wise to recognize this conceptual approach.4 Yet
for research to be relevant...
Journal Article
Mediterranean Quarterly (2002) 13 (3): 119–134.
Published: 01 September 2002
... rights violations make them
international issues in a world of complex interdependencies and trans-
border activities. In an attempt to show the linkage between the domestic
and the international aspects of human rights violations, in this essay I...
Journal Article
Mediterranean Quarterly (2003) 14 (4): 139–157.
Published: 01 December 2003
... movements.5
It has become a truism that the new global economy is drawing states ever
closer together. Yet growing interdependence has not affected all parts of the
globe to the same extent. Some regions have become much more interdepen-
dent than others in political and economic terms...
Journal Article
Mediterranean Quarterly (2016) 27 (3): 135–137.
Published: 01 September 2016
... in the
first place, as they moved from their origins looking for food and arable land. Due to the
interdependence of the various communities of the region, the effects of the long-term
drought and the earthquakes were felt in parts of the Mediterranean world not touched
directly by the events. This left...
Journal Article
Mediterranean Quarterly (2008) 19 (2): 1–4.
Published: 01 June 2008
... and gradual development approach, taking into consideration the
interdependent and complementary nature of the political, economic, and
social dimensions.
In this vein, political, economic, and social reforms introduced since 1987
have transformed Tunisia into an emergent country whose achievements...
Journal Article
Mediterranean Quarterly (2017) 28 (3): 131–133.
Published: 01 September 2017
... of interdependence” that engenders “mutual obligations of reciproc-
ity” between patrons and clients — “a clientelistic exchange.”
This “clientelistic equilibrium” is the hallmark of the Greek political system, and it
is diachronic, deeply rooted, and pervasive. The author asserts, “It creates a systemic...
Journal Article
Mediterranean Quarterly (2001) 12 (4): 33–61.
Published: 01 December 2001
... as a geopolitical whole. The concept of an overarching Euro-
Mediterranean dialogue indeed runs into trouble when competing notions of
security—“hard” versus “soft,” human versus state, and cultural integrity
versus economic interdependence—begin to threaten the entire...
Journal Article
Mediterranean Quarterly (2004) 15 (2): 1–5.
Published: 01 June 2004
... and societies. This
interdependence is confirmed daily on many levels: political, economic, mil-
itary, and even in the daily life of the citizen. Indeed, those who speak of the
global village are not far from the truth.
At the same time, many of the constants of the previous century are
undergoing change...
Journal Article
Mediterranean Quarterly (2000) 11 (4): 84–97.
Published: 01 December 2000
... trends toward economic
globalization and political interdependence. In spite of the fact that neutral-
ity has lost much of its glamour, its study could still offer a unique contri-
bution to the Middle East “peace process.” The cases of Turkmenistan...
Journal Article
Mediterranean Quarterly (2001) 12 (2): 51–65.
Published: 01 June 2001
... of economic interdepen-
dence. The economic interdependence between the United States and other
subregions of the world can be measured through statistics on trade flows and
foreign investment. The intensity of U.S. economic-national interests would...
Journal Article
Mediterranean Quarterly (2003) 14 (2): 15–20.
Published: 01 June 2003
... constitutive
parts of one interdependent economic system subjected them to untold suf-
fering when the federation ceased to exist and wars were fought by one against
another. Furthermore, economic reforms, so essential to an effective transi-
tional process, could not be carried on successfully under...
Journal Article
Mediterranean Quarterly (2010) 21 (3): 119–122.
Published: 01 September 2010
... that
“this collection is timely and necessary, precisely because world societies and politics
at the beginning of the twenty-first century are over-ridden with the opportunities and
risks that come with increasing global interdependencies and connectedness.” There is
no word about the funding...
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