The Elusive Transformation: Science, Technology and the Evolution of International Politics

Book/Chapter
The Elusive Transformation: Science, Technology and the Evolution of International Politics
Skolnikoff, E.B. (1993)
Council on Foreign Relations, Princeton University Press, Princeton, NJ, 336 p.

Abstract/Summary:

This book delves into the roles of science and technology across the entire range of relations among nations, including security and economic issues, environmental questions, international economic competitiveness, the spread of weapons technology, the demise of communism, the new content of dependency relations, and the demanding new problems of national and international governance. It shows how the structure and operation of the scientific and technological enterprises have interacted with international affairs to lead to the dramatic evolution of world politics experienced in this century, particularly after World War II.

© Princeton University Press

Citation:

Skolnikoff, E.B. (1993): The Elusive Transformation: Science, Technology and the Evolution of International Politics. Council on Foreign Relations, Princeton University Press, Princeton, NJ, 336 p. (http://press.princeton.edu/titles/5250.html)
  • Book/Chapter
The Elusive Transformation: Science, Technology and the Evolution of International Politics

Skolnikoff, E.B.

Princeton University Press, Princeton, NJ, 336 p.

Abstract/Summary: 

This book delves into the roles of science and technology across the entire range of relations among nations, including security and economic issues, environmental questions, international economic competitiveness, the spread of weapons technology, the demise of communism, the new content of dependency relations, and the demanding new problems of national and international governance. It shows how the structure and operation of the scientific and technological enterprises have interacted with international affairs to lead to the dramatic evolution of world politics experienced in this century, particularly after World War II.

© Princeton University Press