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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

The United States, NATO, base closures and the new Atlantic relationship

Douglas, Frank Ronald January 2005 (has links)
No description available.
2

Consensus-building and the small actor : the case of Greece within the Nato intergovernmental process

Karakatsanis, Anastasios January 2007 (has links)
No description available.
3

Estonia's integration into NATO : opportunities and willingness of a small state

Mannik, Erik January 2005 (has links)
No description available.
4

Non-EU NATO members in the post-Cold War European security structures : a case study of Norway

Tofte, Sunniva January 2005 (has links)
With the end of the Cold War the roles in European security were reassigned, with NATO and the EU gradually emerging as the two main European security actors. Due to the increasing overlap in memberships between the two organisations, the lack of a clear division of labour is not particularly problematic for the majority of European countries. The non-EU European NATO members, however, have been concerned that they might witness important security issues being transferred from a NATO to an EU domain of consultation and decision-making, and thus moved out of their scope of influence. Their concern is an EU which increasingly takes over responsibilities in the areas where these countries are situated geographically but which is less committed to their concerns, coupled with a NATO/US which increasingly delegates these regional responsibilities to the EU, where the US increasingly deals with the EU directly and as a collective, and where NATO's primacy in the European security architecture is reduced. The role of the non-EU NATO countries in the evolving EU security and defence structures will be an important 'litmus tests' for the ESDP project and NATO-EU relations, and a 'benchmarks' against which the temperature in the transatlantic relationship can be measured. For the EU the non-member question is of considerable symbolic importance. For the non-EU Allies it also has significant practical implications. This thesis uses the case of Norway as a tool for analysing this dilemma. Norway has encountered particular difficulties in adjusting to the post-Cold War realities and to her role as a non-EU Ally, which have been accentuated by a distinct set of historical, idea- and interest-based factors. This thesis seeks to generate conclusions about ESDP, the EU-NATO relationship and thus the dynamics underpinning the post-Cold War evolution of European security structures, through examining a country caught in the middle of the two organisations' gravitational forces, using a methodology mobilising theory based on interests and systems as well as on ideas, discourse and cultural constructs.
5

Reconstructing NATO after the Cold War : from domestic social norms to international security management

Abe, Yuki January 2009 (has links)
This thesis examines the reconstruction of the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation (NATO) since the end of the Cold War. Conventional knowledge in International Relations argues that alliances should dissolve with the disappearance of the military threat which they were created to address. But NATO still exists and has engaged in new activities that depart from its original purpose - specifically, engaging in crisis management beyond its territorial boundary. How is it possible to explain this shift in NATO's purpose and its transformation from an anti-Communist alliance into one that is concerned with humanitarian crises? The thesis analyses this question by posing a view, based on constructivism, that 'international' organisations are developed as state leaders try to meet 'domestic' normative concerns.

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