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- W147662015 abstract "Many analysts' perceptions of the new disorder in the Third World following the end of the Cold War actually demonstrate a conti nuity from the earlier epoch of bipolarity and superpower com petition for power and influence in the developing world. However, the end of the Cold War has made a tremendous difference in these perceptions. It has done so by removing the dominant overlay of global rivalries from Third World conflicts, thereby making the task of studying those conflicts and the accompanying disorder both easier and more complex. The task has been made easier because the new global context allows the analyst to perceive more clearly the primary factors in the Third World's current historical situation that contribute to its security predica ment. Simultaneously, the task has been made more complex by the elimi nation of the simple bipolar model of global competition. It is within this competition that many conflicts in the Third World conveniently could fit because of the external connections between local protagonists and super powers. The neat but superficial packaging had made the conflicts and in securities of Third World states comprehensible to large segments of the policymaking and academic communities. The end of the Cold War there fore has left many specialists, within and outside governments, groping for answers and bewildered at the plethora of ostensibly unique factors that seem to determine the origins and course of individual conflicts in the Third World. Instabilities and insecurities are largely a function of the historical junc ture where most Third World states find themselves. Disorder is primarily the product of the early stage of state making during which, as the earlier European example demonstrates, violence and conflict are inevitable.1 States attempt to expand and consolidate their control over demographic and terri torial space that often is contested by neighboring states. However, these states are concurrently engaged in their own state-building enterprise. Also, populations on the periphery resist the extension of centralized state power, so they inevitably become engaged in interstate wars or intrastate conflicts, which are euphemistically termed civil wars. It is this phenomenon of si multaneous state building by contiguous and proximate states that lies at the" @default.
- W147662015 created "2016-06-24" @default.
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- W147662015 date "1995-07-19" @default.
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- W147662015 title "The New-Old Disorder in the Third World" @default.
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- W147662015 doi "https://doi.org/10.1163/19426720-001-01-90000006" @default.
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