14 Search Results for The Clash of Civilizations Article Review

Clash of Civilizations - Samuel Term Paper

" The book argues that the reality of history is a "ludicrously compressed and constricted warfare," Said continues; but indeed Huntington cannot grasp the notion that there are no strictly defined Muslim cultures but to make his book work he has to Continue Reading...

New Political Theory Article Review

Clash of Civilizations by Samuel Huntington Huntington wrote a paper in 1992 that set the stage for a new era in political discourse. In this article, Huntington makes the argument that the end of the cold war has entered in a new period in which id Continue Reading...

Strategic Security in the Middle Term Paper

Of the six conflicts (within the fifty mentioned) that resulted in 200,000 or more deaths, three were between Muslims and non-Muslims, two were between Muslim cultures, and just one involved non-Muslims on both sides. The author references a New Yo Continue Reading...

Tariq Ali History Can Be Term Paper

In this sense, violence can somewhat be avoided through a fair trade of guarantees. Opposing Huntington's view is the theory of the clash of perceptions rather than that of civilizations. Dr. Mathieu Guidere and Dr. Newton Howard argue against the Continue Reading...

Asian Pacific Security The Asian Assessment

In the post-World War II model Japan, under the economic and political influence of the United States, began repairing its economy and was a clear strategic ally for the U.S. In relation to the Soviet Union. As Japan became more and more sophistica Continue Reading...

Soviet Union and the New Research Paper

In an unprecedented move, Khrushchev denounced many of Stalin's excesses and set about changing Soviet policy towards the developing world. This change, some call it flexibility, was the branch the Soviets offered to developing countries, like Cuba. Continue Reading...

European Colonialism in the Middle Essay

Syria, Jordan, Lebanon and Iraq were all "constructed" as "imperial conveniences for France and Britain" (Gause, 444). And so, when the British and French were authoritative landlords, places like Kuwait (a British "protectorate" until 1961) were sa Continue Reading...