Negotiating Minefields: The Landmines Ban in American PoliticsRoutledge, 2006 - 294 pages Against all odds, the International Campaign to Ban Landmines helped to enact a global treaty banning antipersonnel mines in 1997. For that achievement it was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize. In this volume, Leon Sigal shows how a handful of NGOs with almost no mass base got more than 100 countries to outlaw a weapon that their armies had long used. It is a story of intrigue and misperception, of clashing norms and interests, of contentious bureaucratic and domestic politics. It is also a story of effective leadership, of sustained commitment to a cause, of alliances between campaigners and government officials, of a US senator who championed the ban, and of the skilful use of the news media. Despite this monumental effort, the campaign failed to get the United States to sign the treaty. Drawing on extensive internal documents and interviews with US officials and ban campaigners, Sigal tells the story of the in-fighting inside the Clinton administration, in the Pentagon, and within the ban campaign itself that led to this major setback for an otherwise unprecedented, successful global effort. Negotiating Minefields will be of interest to students and scholars of military and strategic studies and politics and international relations. |
From inside the book
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... differences in military views were not well understood by civilians in the Clinton administration , the news media , or the ban campaign itself . Nor was their source - interservice and intraservice differences in organiza- tional ...
... differences , keeping them from becoming public until after the ban was negotiated in Oslo . Given the depth of those differences , that was quite a feat . The ICBL accomplished this feat by turning itself into the public face of the ...
... difference between the formality of a seat alongside diplomats or invitations to address plenary meetings and an ... differences , diplomats tend to identify with one another as professionals and to view NGOs as outsiders , never to ...
Contents
The Domestic and Bureaucratic Politics of a | 7 |
An Export Moratorium | 18 |
Chapter 3 | 25 |
Copyright | |
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