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Zambian Crisis Behaviour

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Rhodesia's racially inspired rebellion and subsequent unilateral declaration of independence from Britain in November 1965 had profound implications for neighbouring Zambia's national security and ...
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  • 07 November 1994
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Rhodesia's racially inspired rebellion and subsequent unilateral declaration of independence from Britain in November 1965 had profound implications for neighbouring Zambia's national security and economic survival. Focusing on landlocked Zambia's response to the economic and military threat posed by Rhodesia, Zambian Crisis Behaviour is a penetrating analysis of the foreign policy decision-making process under conditions of crisis-induced stress.

In this pioneering study Douglas Anglin describes and dissects the process of crisis decision making in Zambia through a detailed reconstruction of the most critical decisions of 1965-66, and assesses the effect of crisis-induced stress on the policy outcomes of President Kenneth Kaunda and other Zambian leaders.

This case study of Zambian decision making is designed not merely to illuminate a Third World crisis of unusual interest and importance but also to contribute to knowledge and theory about actor responses under conditions of crisis. It will be of interest to Africanists, diplomatic historians, and students of international crises, conflicts, negotiations, sanctions, and diplomacy.

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Price: $125.00
Pages: 408
Publisher: McGill-Queen's University Press
Imprint: McGill-Queen's University Press
Publication Date: 07 November 1994
ISBN: 9780773512191
Format: Hardcover
BISACs: HISTORY / Africa / General, HISTORY / Africa / South / General
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"A seminal study based on painstaking and intricate research by one of the leading researchers on Zambian/Southern African foreign policy and international relations. Zambian Crisis Behaviour represents Anglin's magnum opus." Timothy M. Shaw, Department of Political Science Centre for Foreign Policy Studies, Dalhousie University.