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Problem Representation in Foreign Policy Decision-Making
Paperback

Problem Representation in Foreign Policy Decision-Making

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Previous studies of foreign policy decision making have largely focused on the choice among specified options rather than the prior question of how the options were specified in the first place. Such ‘problem representation’ is the focus of this volume. How do the game theorists’ options and utilities come about? Concretely, for example, how and why in the Cuban missile crisis were blockade, air strike, and invasion chosen as options? To answer such questions, the editors contend the representation of the problem to which the options are a response, the determinants of that representation, and its ramifications must all be analyzed. The contributors to the volume consider these issues both conceptually and empirically, employing the methods of both international relations and political psychology.

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MORE INFO
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Cambridge University Press
Country
United Kingdom
Date
3 February 2011
Pages
358
ISBN
9780521169578

Previous studies of foreign policy decision making have largely focused on the choice among specified options rather than the prior question of how the options were specified in the first place. Such ‘problem representation’ is the focus of this volume. How do the game theorists’ options and utilities come about? Concretely, for example, how and why in the Cuban missile crisis were blockade, air strike, and invasion chosen as options? To answer such questions, the editors contend the representation of the problem to which the options are a response, the determinants of that representation, and its ramifications must all be analyzed. The contributors to the volume consider these issues both conceptually and empirically, employing the methods of both international relations and political psychology.

Read More
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Cambridge University Press
Country
United Kingdom
Date
3 February 2011
Pages
358
ISBN
9780521169578