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Diplomatic Relations, Diplomacy & International Relations
Intermediaries in International Conflict by Thomas Princen β€” book cover

Intermediaries in International Conflict

by Thomas Princen
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Overview

With the increasing interest in mediation at both the domestic and international levels, considerable descriptive and prescriptive work has emerged. Few scholars, however, have attempted to critically evaluate the role mediators play in managing international conflicts. Thomas Princen does that by examining where mediation fits in the larger realm of diplomatic practice. Moreover, he goes beyond the usual state-centric focus to account for the mediating activities of a wide range of actors - from superpowers to small states, from international organizations to nongovernmental groups. Princen uses both deductive reasoning and focused comparative case analysis to develop a logic of "in betweenness." A major theoretical finding is that the effect of intervention depends critically on the bargaining relationship the mediator has with the disputants. Somewhat paradoxically, those mediators with "bargaining power" are not always the most effective. In fact, the very "powerlessness" of some mediators enables them to do what powerful cannot - namely, affect the norms of interaction between disputants. Empirical findings show how mediation seen from the mediator's point of view deviates from idealized depictions and how an intermediary must define and negotiate a role constantly while trying to bring the disputants to agreement.

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Book Details

Published
May 5, 1995
Publisher
Princeton, N.J. : Princeton University Press, 1995, c1992.
Pages
279
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780691001630

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