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Landmark Negotiations from Around the World

Lessons for Modern Diplomacy

Book | 1st edition 2019 | Emmanuel Vivet
Description

History is a source of education and insight for modern diplomacy. Through time, this book analyses 30 famous negotiations from around the World: from Roman Republic peace talks to the Philadelphia Convention, the Congress of Vienna and the first UK embassy in China, through two World Wars, as well as more recent examples such as the Iran Security Council resolutions and the Trump negotiations in Korea, just to name a few.

Landmark Negotiations from Around the World brings together the subject areas of history and negotiation studies. It focuses on their overlap and analyses past and present negotiations, applying the latest concepts of negotiation studies: a summary of each negotiation focusing on the chain of events is followed by a critical analysis cross-referencing the facts to modern negotiation theory concepts. In this way, each chapter provides answers to key questions such as: what made a successful negotiation possible? Why did a given failure occur? It helps us to identify and to qualify the good moves, the brilliant ideas, the unexpected coalitions and the uneasy situations that made a negotiation either a success or a failure.

A handpicked team of authors consisting of historians, diplomats and scholars, all specialising in international negotiation, provide unique insights, as well as entertaining and lively stories past and present, preparing us for the future.

A book of interest to anyone who revels in acting on the international stage.

With a foreword by Pierre Vimont (first Executive Secretary General of the European External Action Service) and a theoretical introduction by William Zartman (Johns Hopkins University School of Advanced International Studies).

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'History can teach today’s diplomats the lessons of a long line of predecessors. ' -- From the foreword by Pierre Vimont (First Executive Secretary General of the European External Action Service)

'From the perspective of a diplomatic historian and an applied historian, this work is a welcome piece of scholarship that complements the growing literature on history and international affairs.' -- Kelly M. McFarland, Negotiation Journal, 2020
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Emmanuel Vivet is a French civil servant and spent 15 years specializing in negotiations at governmental level in various public international fields (bilateral and multilateral) and for the European Commission. He also is an associate research fellow at the Institute for Research and Education on Negotiation (IRENE, France).

Technical info
More Information
Type of product Book
Format Paperback
EAN / ISSN 9781780688510 / 9781780689463
Weight 590 g
Status Available
Number of pages xxxvi
Access to exercice No
Publisher Intersentia
Language English
Publication Date Oct 18, 2019
Available on Jurisquare No
Available on Strada Belgique No
Available on Strada Europe No
Available on Strada Luxembourg No
Chapters

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  • Preliminary pages
    Emmanuel Vivet
  • Introduction: We Produce History; We Might as Well Use it, Wisely
    I. William Zartman
  • Part I TO NEGOTIATE, OR NOT TO NEGOTIATE
  • Roman Diplomacy During the Republic: Do the Mighty Negotiate?
    Ghislaine Stouder
  • The Treaty of Dijon (1513): Or, the Art of Negotiating without a Mandate
    Laurent Vissière
  • Diplomatic Crisis in July 1914: Secrecy, Ultimatums, and Missed Opportunities
    Kevin Homrighausen
  • The German “All or Nothing” Approach in 1917: Unwilling to Negotiate
    Emmanuel Vivet
  • Part II BILATERAL NEGOTIATIONS
  • The Phoenicians (960 BCE): Long Distances, Close Business Relationships
    Randy D. Hazlett
  • Christopher Columbus and the Catholic Monarchs (1485–1492): Negotiating Troubled Waters
  • The 1998 St Malo Declaration on European Defense: High Ambitions, Modest Results
    Peter Ricketts
  • US–Chile Free Trade Negotiations (2000–2003): Linkage Analysis
    Larry Crump
  • Negotiating Peace with the FARC (2010–2016): Out of the Woods?
    Frans Schram
  • Part III MULTILATERAL NEGOTIATIONS
  • Constantinople, the Armies of the First Crusade and Alexius I Comnenus: How a Coalition was Built between Latins and Greeks in 1096
  • The Constantinople Conference (1876–1877): Negotiating with Russia
    Isabelle Dasque
  • No Impunity for the Crimes in Darfur (2005): Negotiations within the Security Council
    Jean-Marc de La Sablière
  • Negotiating the American Constitution (1787–1789): Coalitions, Process Rules, and Compromises
    Carrie Menkel-Meadow
  • The Vienna Congress (1814–1815): A Security Council “Avant La Lettre”
  • The 1856 Congress of Paris: Putting Victory to Good Use
    Yves Bruley
  • Woodrow Wilson in Versailles: A Transparent Diplomat’s Frustrated Ambition
    Aurélien Colson
  • The Convention on the Future of Europe (2002–2003): A Model Process for a Multi-Institutional Meeting
    Francesco Marchi
  • Part IV BEYOND INTERESTS: EMOTIONS, BELIEFS AND VALUES
  • An Industrialization Deal in 1868 Japan: Glover the Scotsman in Nagasaki
    William Baber
  • The 1659 Treaty of the Pyrenees: France and Spain Negotiate Honor
    Emmanuel Vivet
  • The Macartney Embassy to China (1793): Negotiating Face and Symbols
  • What Set Off the Korean Conflict of 1950? Interests, Reputation, and Emotions
    Emmanuel Petit
  • The Cuban Missile Crisis, 1962: Overt Confrontation, Covert Diplomacy and Downright Luck
    R. Gerald Hughes
  • The Run Up to the Trump/Kim Singapore Summit: Playing Redand Playing Blue
    Mark Young
  • Part V MIDDLE EAST NEGOTIATIONS: INTERESTS OR EMOTIONS?
  • Negotiating in Syria in 1920: Gouraud and Faisal before the Battle of Damascus
    Julie d’Andurain
  • UN Security Council Resolution 242 of 1967: Ambiguity in International Agreements
    Sami Faltas
  • The Iran Nuclear Issue (2003–2005): Choosing to Negotiate
    Stanislas de Laboulaye
  • The Iran Nuclear Negotiations (2005–2015): Tumbling in the Escalation Trap
    Tobias W. Langenegger
  • Part VI MEDIATIONS
  • Raoul Nordling and the 1944 Liberation of Paris: A Mediator Saves Paris
    Arnaud Stimec
  • The Peace Process in Northern Ireland (1997–2007): From Hatred to Reason
    Marc Beretta
  • Four Decades in the Southern Philippines (1971–2008): Can “Biased” Mediators be Helpful?
    Ariel Macaspac Hernandez
  • Conclusion: Lessons for Modern Diplomacy
    Emmanuel Vivet
  • Index