US Foreign Policy in the Post-Bush Era: Implications for Europe and the OSCE
Ph.D, Department of Politics, University of Strathclyde, Glasgow, Scotland, 1979
B.A, Department of Economics, Temple University, (Cum Laude) Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, 1967, Certificate Johann Wolfgang Goethe-University, Frankfurt,
in German Federal Republic of Germany, 1977
Dennis Sandole examines the implications of US foreign policy in the post-Bush era for Europe.
The OSCE Yearbook 2010 recognizes Kazakhstan's groundbreaking Chairmanship of the Organization in a special focus section on Central Asia. Topics include Islam in the security discourse of the Central Asian states, legal reform in Central Asia, Kazakhstan's nationalities policy, Kyrgyzstan since the "Tulip Revolution", and relations between the state and Muslim communities in Central Asia.
2010 was also the year of the OSCE’s first Summit since 1999, and several contributions deal with the Astana Meeting of Heads of State or Government. Others discuss the Corfu Process, the proposed Treaty on European Security, and related initiatives.
The OSCE States in the spotlight in the 2010 edition are Ukraine and Slovenia. Contributions on conflict prevention and dispute settlement consider how the Corfu Process may affect the OSCE's conflict prevention activities, and look at the situations in Georgia and Crimea.
Topics in the section on the OSCE's three dimensions of security include election observation in longstanding democracies; post-conflict democratization in Bosnia and Herzegovina, Kosovo, and Macedonia; the difficulty of protecting freedom of the media while combating terrorism; the Bolzano/Bozen Recommendations on National Minorities; and energy security.
Further articles introduce the Collective Security Treaty Organization, consider the OSCE's attempts to establish a mediation-support capacity, and assess the OSCE's relations with its Mediterranean Partners for Co-operation.
The OSCE Yearbook addresses students and academics, politicians and journalists, and the interested general public.
The OSCE Yearbook 2009, which was published in early 2010, contains a wealth of informed writing on the Organization, its activities, and the issues that concern it. It opens with four contributions written by leading European security experts: Adam Daniel Rotfeld asks whether Europe needs a “new security architecture”, Andrei Zagorski addresses President Medvedev’s proposal for a Treaty on European Security and the resulting “Corfu Process”, as do Pál Dunay and Graeme P. Herd, while Egon Bahr and Reinhard Mutz discuss the future of détente.
The participating States in focus this year are Ukraine, Lithuania, and Belarus; Dennis Sandole also examines the implications of US foreign policy in the post-Bush era for Europe. The OSCE conflict prevention and dispute settlement activities discussed include the prospects for conflict resolution in Moldova, the role of the Mission in Kosovo, military aspects of the OSCE Mission to Bosnia and Herzegovina, the OSCE Centre in Astana at ten, and prospects for conflict settlement in Nagorno-Karabakh.