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OverviewIn the space where institutions vowed ""all for one,"" aggressors learned to move fast while committees talked. This book reveals how a system built on noble collective security promises collapsed under the weight of unanimity rules, imperial hierarchies, and economic fear. Through gripping case studies-from the Manchuria incident to the Abyssinia crisis and the Rhineland-it shows why rules without capability and will cannot keep the peace. If you care about international relations history and today's fragile order, this is the sharp, usable analysis you need. - Understand why sanctions failed: what makes sanctions effectiveness real rather than performative - See how credibility is built and broken, using a practical model of deterrence and credibility - Learn the design flaws that turned legal commitments into paper shields-and how to fix them in modern institutions - Trace the path from interwar missteps to the causes of World War II without clichés or hindsight bias Written for policy readers, historians, journalists, and engaged citizens, it balances rigour with clarity. You'll come away with a mental toolkit for judging any proposed ""global solution"" who pays, who decides, and what happens when costs bite. From interwar diplomacy to present‐day crises, it offers field-tested principles for the design of global institutions that can act when it matters. If you want fewer surprises on tomorrow's map, start with the lessons Geneva couldn't learn. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Sofia NowakPublisher: Vij Books Imprint: Vij Books Volume: 4 Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 0.90cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.218kg ISBN: 9789390349760ISBN 10: 9390349761 Pages: 156 Publication Date: 05 November 2025 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Not yet available This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon its release. Table of ContentsReviewsAuthor InformationSofia Nowak writes about the politics of peace-how institutions promise order and how power, money, and fear decide whether those promises hold. Raised between Warsaw and Brussels, she grew up with maps in the hallway and arguments about treaties at the dinner table, which seeded a lifelong preoccupation with what holds neighbours back from war. Her work moves between Geneva's paper trails and the lived choices of cabinets, drawing on international relations, economic history, and the psychology of decision-making. She favours clear language over slogans, design principles over nostalgia, and the belief that honest accounting of costs is a higher form of idealism. This book continues her project: to read the 1930s without melodrama and to recover hard lessons for the institutions we rely on today. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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