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Why nations fight : past and future motives for war



Four generic motives have historically led states to initiate war: fear, interest, standing and revenge. Using an original dataset, Richard Ned Lebow examines the distribution of wars across three and a half centuries and argues that, contrary to conventional wisdom, only a minority of these were motivated by security or material interest. Instead, the majority are the result of a quest for standing, and for revenge - an attempt to get even with states who had previously made successful territorial grabs


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8760/PUP/2019355.027 LEB w c.1Perpustakaan Universitas PertaminaAvailable
8761/PUP/2019355.027 LEB w c.2Perpustakaan Universitas PertaminaAvailable

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Series Title
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Call Number
355.027 LEB w
Publisher Cambridge University Press : Cambridge ; New York.,
Collation
xii, 295 p; illust; 23 cm
Language
English
ISBN/ISSN
978-0-521-17045-1
Classification
355.027
Content Type
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Media Type
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Edition
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Subject(s)
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