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Chad E. Nelson examines the point when leaders fear revolution is spreading and how that affects international politics. He argues that leaders fear contagion only when they have a significant revolutionary movement of their own, and when they do, it prompts hostility toward the revolutionary state and cooperation with similar contagion fears, sometimes in contrast to geopolitical pressures. Nelson tests this theory by assessing the response by major powers to revolutions and revolts from an the major ideological movements of the last two centuries, including the American Revolution, the Russian Revolution, the Italian Fascist revolution, and the Iranian Islamist Revolution.
It's 1982. Before cell phones and the internet, boys had bikes and their imaginations. Grit Norris and his two best friends had both. When a bully from Grit's past reappears, the boys nearly lose their lives before an adventure changes all of them forever.
A unique theory of what happens when leaders fear a revolution abroad will spread to their own country and how that affects international relations. When do leaders fear that a revolution elsewhere will spread to their own polities, and what are the international effects of this fear? In Revolutionary Contagion, Chad E. Nelson develops and tests a theory that explains how states react to ideological-driven revolutions that have occurred in other nations. To do this, he analyzes four key revolutionary movements over two centuries-liberalism, communism, fascism, and Islamism. He further explains that the key to understanding the response to revolutions lies in focusing on the extent to which l...
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The Routledge Handbook of Ideology and International Relations reviews, consolidates, and advances the study of ideology in international politics. The volume unifies fragmented scholarship on ideology’s impact on international relations into a wide-ranging and go-to volume. Declarations of the ‘end of ideology’ have once again been proven premature: nationalisms of various stripes are thriving; ideological polarization and conflicts both within and among states are growing; and environmentalist, feminist and anti-globalization activists are intensifying their demands on international institutions and states. This timely volume presents ideology as a way of explaining these major devel...