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- W2002400574 abstract "In the decade following the fall of the Berlin Wall, the dissolution of the Warsaw Pact, and the collapse of the USSR, there followed a urry of attempts at describing what the post–Cold War order would be. The lack of certainty was re ected in the variety of scenarios presented. Typically, in a fashion that re ected the rigidity of thought prevalent during the Cold War years, the rst attempts concentrated on the identication of new poles to replace the dual superpower poles of the previous decades. Among the alternatives to the bipolar balance of the United States versus the USSR, were a unipolar order (United States alone), a tripolar order (United States, Europe, Japan), and various multipolar variations. Beyond these simplistic options, there developed more holistic and nuanced propositions. Perhaps the two most famous theories or visions were those of the conservative academic Francis Fukuyama and the doyen of nation-state security studies, Samuel P. Huntington. In the early nineties both attempted to give a new overarching appraisal of the coming geostrategic reality. Fukuyama ingeniously entitled his theory with the suf ciently provocative title The End of History. While obviously meant to be a controversial title, the thesis itself was less so. The argument essentially was that the twentieth century could be typi ed by the attempts of two extreme ideologies to destroy the “market democracy” model of state administration: Nazism and Communism. The fact that both were defeated1 by the last decade of the century meant that democracy had been victorious and thus there was “no new history to write.” Huntington’s vision, as declared in his article and book Clash of Civilizations, was a far darker one. His prediction was that the age of con icts between nationstates, or alliances of nation-states, would be replaced by an era of con icts arising between cultures, or civilizations, or along the divides between them, a harking back to more medieval divisions. Wars in this new (or revisited old) age would be caused, or at least exacerbated, by poverty differentials between North and South, West and East, as well as by religious fundamentalism." @default.
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- W2002400574 date "2011-01-01" @default.
- W2002400574 modified "2023-09-25" @default.
- W2002400574 title "International Cooperation as a Tool in Counterterrorism: Then and Now" @default.
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- W2002400574 doi "https://doi.org/10.11610/connections.10.2.02" @default.
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