Arthur Stein

Arthur Asher Stein (born November 19, 1950) is a Professor of Political Science at the University of California, Los Angeles.

Specialising in issues such as ethnic conflict, terrorism, economic relations, and global governance, Stein has served on the editorial boards of International Organization, the American Journal of Political Science, and International Interactions and was a member of the Statewide Steering Committee for the Institute for Global Conflict and Cooperation. He is currently an Editor of the American Political Science Review.[1]

Publications

  • Why Nations Cooperate: Circumstances and Choice in International Relations (1990)[2][3]
gollark: That could easily be done with anything which renders to HTML, or indeed basically anything which renders to anything which can display graphics.
gollark: However, when you write a thing in it, it's beneficial if you know how it'll display and it displays the same way on all platforms you like.
gollark: If it wasn't meant to be parsed at all, you wouldn't need the program or any spec whatsoever, yes.
gollark: Parsers also take up several thousand lines of code and are quite hard to extend.
gollark: Every interaction I have with markdown parsers tempts me more and more to use some actually parseable language instead.

References

  1. Editors, American Political Science Review. Accessed June 17, 2010
  2. Why nations cooperate: circumstance and choice in international relations Cornell University Press at Google Books
  3. Pierre Andrew J. (1993) Foreign Affairs September/October Book Review of Why nations cooperate: circumstance and choice in international relations by Arthur Stein, Cornell University Press, 1990


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