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British Foreign Policy and the Conflict in Sierra Leone, 1991-2001

by Michael Kargbo (Author)
©2006 Monographs 348 Pages

Summary

This book critically examines the content of British policy towards Sierra Leone from the outbreak of conflict there in 1991 to its official conclusion in 2001. It attempts to find answers to why Britain’s New Labour government pursued a more proactive policy in Sierra Leone than its Conservative predecessors. This is done by means of traditionalist but especially transformationalist theoretical approaches. Analysis is made of the influence of major international organisations on British policy towards the Sierra Leone conflict as well as the impact of other important states. As foreign policy is not created in a vacuum, analysis is also made of the impact of the domestic setting, especially bureaucratic institutions.

Details

Pages
348
Year
2006
ISBN (Softcover)
9783039103324
Language
English
Keywords
Großbritannien Sierra Leone Geschichte 1991-2001 Imprint of History Britain Nigeria Außenpolitik Domestic Sourcew
Published
Oxford, Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, Frankfurt am Main, New York, Wien, 2006. 348 pp.

Biographical notes

Michael Kargbo (Author)

The Author: Michael S. Kargbo received his Ph.D. on British foreign policy and the conflict in Sierra Leone from the University of Birmingham’s Centre of West African Studies. His Ph.D. thesis won the prestigious R E Bradbury Memorial Prize awarded by the School of Historical Studies. He holds graduate degrees in International Relations and Development Studies, and International Tourism Policy from the universities of East Anglia and North London respectively, and a BA in Social Sciences from Fourah Bay College, University of Sierra Leone.

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Title: British Foreign Policy and the Conflict in Sierra Leone, 1991-2001