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Ending the Korean War: The Role of Domestic Coalition Shifts in Overcoming Obstacles to Peace
by
Stanley, Elizabeth A.
in
Armistice
/ Bargaining
/ China
/ Civil wars
/ Coalitions
/ Cold wars
/ Communism
/ Conflict resolution
/ Cross-national analysis
/ Decision making
/ Domestic affairs
/ Entrapment
/ Foreign policy
/ Foreign policy making
/ Government coalitions
/ International Conflict
/ International cooperation
/ International relations
/ Korea
/ Korean War
/ North Korea
/ Peace
/ Peace negotiations
/ Peace process
/ Peacetime
/ Peoples Republic of China
/ Prisoners of war
/ Repatriation
/ South Korea
/ Space warfare
/ U.S.A
/ U.S.S.R
/ Union of Soviet Socialist Republics
/ United States of America
/ War
/ War economics
2009
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Ending the Korean War: The Role of Domestic Coalition Shifts in Overcoming Obstacles to Peace
by
Stanley, Elizabeth A.
in
Armistice
/ Bargaining
/ China
/ Civil wars
/ Coalitions
/ Cold wars
/ Communism
/ Conflict resolution
/ Cross-national analysis
/ Decision making
/ Domestic affairs
/ Entrapment
/ Foreign policy
/ Foreign policy making
/ Government coalitions
/ International Conflict
/ International cooperation
/ International relations
/ Korea
/ Korean War
/ North Korea
/ Peace
/ Peace negotiations
/ Peace process
/ Peacetime
/ Peoples Republic of China
/ Prisoners of war
/ Repatriation
/ South Korea
/ Space warfare
/ U.S.A
/ U.S.S.R
/ Union of Soviet Socialist Republics
/ United States of America
/ War
/ War economics
2009
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Do you wish to request the book?
Ending the Korean War: The Role of Domestic Coalition Shifts in Overcoming Obstacles to Peace
by
Stanley, Elizabeth A.
in
Armistice
/ Bargaining
/ China
/ Civil wars
/ Coalitions
/ Cold wars
/ Communism
/ Conflict resolution
/ Cross-national analysis
/ Decision making
/ Domestic affairs
/ Entrapment
/ Foreign policy
/ Foreign policy making
/ Government coalitions
/ International Conflict
/ International cooperation
/ International relations
/ Korea
/ Korean War
/ North Korea
/ Peace
/ Peace negotiations
/ Peace process
/ Peacetime
/ Peoples Republic of China
/ Prisoners of war
/ Repatriation
/ South Korea
/ Space warfare
/ U.S.A
/ U.S.S.R
/ Union of Soviet Socialist Republics
/ United States of America
/ War
/ War economics
2009
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Ending the Korean War: The Role of Domestic Coalition Shifts in Overcoming Obstacles to Peace
Journal Article
Ending the Korean War: The Role of Domestic Coalition Shifts in Overcoming Obstacles to Peace
2009
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Overview
Bargaining models of war suggest that war ends after two sides develop an overlapping bargaining space. Domestic mechanisms—domestic governing coalitions, a state's elite foreign policy decisionmaking group, and their role in ending interstate war—are critical in explaining how, when, and why that bargaining space develops. Through preference, information, and entrapment obstacles, wars can become \"stuck\" and require a change in expectations to produce a war-terminating bargaining space. A major source of such change is a shift in belligerents' governing coalitions. Events in the United States, China, and the Soviet Union during the Korean War illustrate the dynamics of these obstacles and the need for domestic coalition shifts in overcoming them before the conflict could be brought to an end.
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