Strategic Survey 2009

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defence policy analysis
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EU Gas Market
EU Monitoring Mission
EU Rotating Presidency
EU's Special Representative
Exclusive Economic Zone
Federal Reserve
Gdp Growth
geopolitical risk assessment
global strategic policy trends
Gps Navigation System
Guantanamo Bay Detention Centre
International Monetary Fund
international security studies
InterServices Intelligence
Malakand Division
Middle East
NATO International Security Assistance Force
NATO Leader
NATO Membership
NATO Russia Relation
NATO Summit
NATO's Bucharest Summit
NATO's Failure
NATO's Mission
peacekeeping operations research
regional conflict dynamics
Russia EU Relation
South Ossetia
Start Agreement
Support NATO Membership
terrorism and counterterrorism

Product details

  • ISBN 9781857435269
  • Weight: 627g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 27 Sep 2009
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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The Strategic Survey is a journal of records that includes all relevant names and titles, chronologies and dates. But it is also much more: the hard facts are embossed in considered and nuanced analysis over 300 pages of text. The Strategic Survey opens with 'Perspectives', an assessment of the effect of major events and trends on the strategic landscape. Next, particular strategic policy issues, such as terrorism and weapons of mass destruction, missile defence and the future of peacekeeping, are examined in separate chapters.

Another eighteen to twenty chapters of similar length, written along thematic rather than merely chronological lines, cover developments in particular regions or countries. The Strategic Survey concludes with 'Prospectives', an essay setting forth strategic priorities for the coming year. Also included are thirty-two pages of maps depicting strategically important activity and political change - such as piracy and Russia's new federal districts - globally, regionally and locally.

The interplay of political developments and the actual or potential use of military force remains The Strategic Survey's chief concern. Nevertheless, since the end of the Cold War and of the first distinct post-Cold War period, the Institute has recognised that any survey of matters strategic needs to broaden its scope to embrace economic

The International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS)