
Cyprus
Description
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Fouskas and Tackie argue that the rise to power of two left-wing parties on both sides of the Green Line means it is time to launch a serious political dialogue to initiate a post-imperial constitutional process. This is a feasible undertaking, not least because Cyprus is a member of the EU, but not a member of NATO.
Short and accessible, this book aims to revive a debate in the spirit of Dervis Ali Kavatzoglou and Constantine Misiaoulis, popular symbols of a united, democratic and independent Cyprus.
Reviews / Votes
'This study offers a new intellectual ethos to uncover the complex historical facts and explain the current deadlock in Cyprus' -- Buelent Aras, Professor of International Relations, Isik University, Istanbul 'A provocative account placing the evolution of the well-known history of the Cyprus problem in the context of competing great power politics and strategic considerations in the Eastern Mediterranean' -- Van Coufoudakis, Professor Emeritus, Indiana, University-Purdue University, Fort Wayne 'A magisterial synthesis of a good deal of the Cyprus problem, which can be grasped at one sitting' -- Dr. William Mallinson, Lecturer-elect of European History, Ionian University, Corfu 'A welcome contribution to the understanding of an important topic: how to solve the Cyprus question on the basis of a post-imperial agenda' -- Buelent Goekay, Professor of International Relations, Keele University, Stoke-on-Trent 'There is originality here both in the approach and the argument. [The authors] have much to say on how to step out of the current deadlock in Cyprus' -- Marios Evriviades, Assistant Professor of International Politics, Panteion University, AthensMore details
Other editions
Additional editions

Persons
Alex Tackie is Senior Lecturer in Economics at Kingston University, UK. He has previously collaborated on published work on Greece and Cyprus and is the author of Cyprus (Pluto, 2009).
Content
Chronicle of the Cyprus crisis
Introduction
1. Narrating Cyprus
2. The Partitions of Cyprus after 1974
3. The 'Isolation' of Turkish Cypriots
Conclusion
Notes
Bibliography
Index
System requirements
File format: PDF
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