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Back Matter Source: The Journal of Conflict Resolution, Vol. 12, No. 2 (Jun., 1968) Published by: Sage Publications, Inc. Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/172706 . Accessed: 09/05/2014 14:52 Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at . http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp . JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact [email protected]. . Sage Publications, Inc. is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to The Journal of Conflict Resolution. http://www.jstor.org This content downloaded from 194.29.185.85 on Fri, 9 May 2014 14:52:22 PM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
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Back MatterSource: The Journal of Conflict Resolution, Vol. 12, No. 2 (Jun., 1968)Published by: Sage Publications, Inc.Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/172706 .

Accessed: 09/05/2014 14:52

Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at .http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp

.JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range ofcontent in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new formsof scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact [email protected].

.

Sage Publications, Inc. is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to The Journal ofConflict Resolution.

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New from California Pluralism and Democracy in the Netherlands Arend Lijphart

Although its society is deeply divided by religious and ideological cleavages, the Netherlands has long offered one of the notable examples of stable and effective democracy. Here is an extended theoretical analysis of Dutch politics, focusing on the conditions which enhance stability. The author examines events in the early twentieth century which led to development of unwritten rules of cooperation and concludes that, to accommodate the Dutch example, pluralist theory must be modified in several respects. $5.75

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Military Organization and Society Stanislaw Andreski

Published originally in 1954, this examination of the influence of military organization on social structure studies the connections that exist between such organization and social stratification, distribution of wealth, size and cohesiveness of political units, and stability of political systems.

"Dr. Andreski has made an important contribution to sociology and a fortiori to social anthropology ... He has evidently done a vast amount of scholarly, hard work, the thinking is original and sophisticated, and the exposition concise and lucid. . . . this is a remarkable book."-Man

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The Problem of Restoration A Study in Comparative Political History Robert A. Kann In this major work, a distinguished historian discusses the implications of the replacement of an established socio-political system by a revolutionary one and its subsequent re-establishment. He examines particularly the time factor, first in general terms and then in a series of penetrating case studies ranging from the return of the Jews to their homeland after the Babylonian captivity to the establishment of the second German Empire under Bismarck. $13.50

UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA PRESS ? Berkeley 94720

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SOCIAL PROBLEMS SUPPLEMENTS

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LAW AND SOCIETY Richard D. Schwartz, Jerome H. Skolnick, Harry W. Jones, Geoffrey C. Hazard, Jr., and Anne Rankin (Sponsored jointly by the Law and Society Association and The Society for the Study of Social Problems) SOCIAL PROBLEMS Supplement Summer, 1965

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Theoretical and research papers on personality dynamics, group process, and psychological aspects of social structure.

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The Journal of

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ISSUES OCTOBER, 1967 VOLUME XXIII, No. 4

FAMILY PLANNING IN CROSS NATIONAL PERSPECTIVE

Issue Editor: Lee Rainwater

Family Planning in Cross-National Perspective: An Overview ........... Lee Rainwater A Psychologist's Introduction to the Birth Planning Literature ..... Edward Pohlman Clinical Notes on the Motives of Reproduction ... ........ Frederick Wyatt Fertility, Family Planning, and the Social Organization

of Family Life: Some Methodological Issues . ..... Aaron V. Cicourel

Stability and Change in Family Size Expectations Over the First Two Years of Marriage ... ... Larry Bumpass

Modern Values and Fertility Ideals in Brazil and Mexico ........--.. - Joseph A. Kahl

Contraception and Catholicism in Latin America ..- .. .. J. Mayone Stycos Population Control and the Private Sector . - ............ .... .. John U. Farley and

Harold J. Leavitt

Family Planning, Public Policy and Intervention Strategy ..---- Frederick S. Jaffe

The Taiwan Experiments: The Research Challenge to Social Scientists in the

Developing Family Planning Programs: The Case of Taiwan ..... Ronald Freedman An Experimental Study of the Effect of Group Meetings

on the Acceptance of Family Planning in Taiwan -.......... Laura Pan Lu, H. C. Chen, L. P. Chow

Organization and Management Needs of a National Family Planning Program: The Case of India .....-....... Nicholas J. Demerath

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Political Discontinuities in the International System .- ......-. Oran R. Young

Peru's Postponed Revolution - ------- ------ ..... David Chaplin

Inequality and Insurgency: A Statistical Study of South Vietnam ..-......-...... Edward J. Mitchell

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XYDIS, STEPHEN G. The UN General Assembly as an instrument of Greek : policy: Cyprus, 1954-58. Journal of Conflict Resolution, 12, 2 (June 1968), I 141-58.

Between 1954 and 1958 the Greek government resorted to the UN General Assembly five times over Cyprus. Its ostensible goal was to get the Assembly to adopt a resolution that referred to the principle or the right of self-determination for the population of Cyprus or, in the case of the fifth recourse, to the establish- , ment of an independent Cyprus. The Assembly's responses to these five successive [ political stimuli, however, do not seem to have helped the achievement of these , ostensible Greek goals, even though the latter goal was eventually attained. The setting up of an independent Cyprus was reached outside, not inside, the UN. : Nevertheless, the international instrument which the Greek government sought : to use for promoting its foreign-policy goal as well as the Greek Cypriot aspirations for enosis influenced not only the procedures finally adopted but also the substance of the solution. Beneath the corporate veil of the UN, two of the most influential <

third-party member states at the time-the US and India-had exerted their political weight. As a result, if the procedure of the conflict's resolution was primarily American, the substance of the settlement was, in the last analysis, Indian.

BERNSTEIN, ROBERT A., and PETER D. WELDON. A structural approach to the analysis of international relations. Journal of Con;flict Resolution, 12, 2 (June 1968), 159-81.

Using variables previously operationalized at other systems levels, the authors attempt to construct a scheme applicable to the analysis of international relations. The variables differentiation, articulation, and relative centrality are examined along four subdimensions of international relations: diplomacy, trade, international organizations, and military alliances. Guttman scaling techniques and simple matrix analysis are employed. Relationships between the variables are explored and several hypotheses are suggested: for example, that if a nation is highly differentiated internally it will tend to be highly differentiated externally; that if a nation is highly differentiated it will be highly articulated and more relatively central; and that such a nation will tend to articulate with nations at a similar level of differ- entiation.

DENTON, FRANK H., and WARREN PHILLIPS. Some patterns in the history of violence. Journal of Conflict Resolution, 12, 2 (June 1968), 182-95.

This paper reports on progress made in describing systematic trends in violence between political groups. The report is in two parts. Part one describes the formulation of an empirical test of two hypotheses: (1) periods of high violence in the international system will be followed by a decrease in the level of violence; and (2) periods of low systematic violence will be followed by an increase in violence. The second part of the paper speculates about several possible reasons for these patterns. The testing of the hypotheses relies upon Quincy Wright's compilation of conflict statistics covering the period 1480-1900. Factor-analytic techniques are employed in order to observe the fluctuations in the amount of conflict over the 420-year period.

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INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATION Spring 1968, Volume 22, Number 2

ARTICLES New Wine and Old Bottles: The Changing

Inter-American System ------------------------------.--- John C. Dreier

Institutional and Political Conditions of Participation of Socialist States in International Organizations ---.-_------- Wojciech Morawiecki

UNEF, the Secretary-General, and International Diplomacy in the Third Arab-Israeli War ------------_ . ......---_ - Yashpal Tandon

The Inter-American Commission on Human Rights Anna and Philippe S. E. and the Protection of Human Rights in the Dominican Crisis ----_----- Schreiber

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From the contents of Issue No. 4 of 1967: La Crise au proche Orient-H. Rolin The Six Days War in the Middle East in the light of International Law-M. Mushkat For total peace in the Middle East-Y. Talmon La Crise au proche Orient et ses renseignements-L. Hamon The Wave of the Past and the Wave of the Future in the Middle East-A. Levontin Arab-Israeli Relations-A Pilot Study-J. D. Newnham

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MAZUR, ALLAN. A nonrational approach to theories of conflict and coalitions. Journal of Conflict Resolution, 12, 2 (June 1968), 196-205.

Current theories of conflict and coalition behavior are generally based on notions of rational decision-making. But behavior in certain very important conflict situations-notably those involving war, hate, and general intensity of feeling- often cannot accurately be characterized as rational. It is suggested, therefore, that conflict theorists reorient themselves from rational to nonrational, or emotional, models of conflict and coalition behavior. One such nonrational theory may be based on the social-psychological notions of balance and dissonance. Such a theory is presented, demonstrated in some simple interpersonal conflict examples, and then applied to the very complex conflict-coalition system characteristic of tribal segmentary-lineage political systems. Finally, the nonrational model is extended to describe the interrelation of levels of conflict, support, and accompanying affective sentiments.

PHILLIPS, JAMES L., and LAWRENCE NITZ. Social contacts in a three-person "political convention" situation. Journal of Conflict Resolution, 12, 2 (June 1968), 206-14.

This paper reports on a study which compares the predictions of minimum resource theory, minimum power theory, and anticompetitive theory in a mock political convention situation, in which the payoff cannot be divided. The dependent variable, probability of contacting the candidate with fewer resources, was shown to be reliably greater than %1/ for a wide range of distributions and resources. This result was interpreted as supporting minimum resource theory over both minimum power theory and anticompetitive theory. A shift in the probability of contacting the candidate with fewer resources was observed, at the equalitarian point (i.e., the point at which all players have an equal number of votes). A "weakened" version of anticompetitive theory was suggested to account for this shift.

SUMMERS, DAVID A. Conflict, compromise, and belief change in a decision- making task. Journal of Conflict Resolution, 12, 2 (June 1968), 215-21.

Interpersonal conflict arising from cognitive differences was studied in decision- making dyads. Specifically, subjects holding different beliefs about the determinants of minority status were paired in a task which required that they predict the future status of minority citizens in hypothetical nations. As expected, it was found that the subject's compromise behavior in such a task is substantially affected by inter- action goals induced by instructions. Moreover, it was found that (1) the amount of conflict between subjects' initial predictions was inversely related to subsequent compromise; (2) the amount of compromise by one subject was inversely related to the amount of compromise by the other; and (3) the amount of belief change evidenced during the task was directly related to prior public compromise.

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THE WORLD TODAY The monthly review of the Royal Institute of International Affairs provides the

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Waiting For Ho --..- .... ... by Adam Roberts

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GAHAGAN, JAMES P., and JAMES T. TEDESCHI. Strategy and the credibility c of promises in the Prisoner's Dilemma game. Journal of Conflict Resolution, 12,

'

2 (June 1968), 224-34.

Seventy-two subjects played a Prisoner's Dilemma game against a "dummy" who played either a 50 percent or a 75 percent cooperative strategy on a preplanned 0 and random basis over 110 iterations of the game. Subjects were in one of three v

message credibility conditions: a promise to cooperate which was sent by the "dummy" on every tenth trial was kept 90 percent, 60 percent, or 30 percent of E the time. Difference in strategies did not affect the strategy selections of the X

subjects. Subjects who received the most highly credible messages cooperated p more often on the message trials, were more willing to reciprocate promises, and

displayed more "trust" than did subjects in either of the other two credibility p conditions. Strategy X credibility interactions were found on overall cooperative strategy selections, cooperations on the message trials, and "forgiveness."

KNAPP, W.ILLIAM NI., and JERONME E. PODELL. .Mental patients, prisoners, and students wvith simulated partners in a mixed-motive game. Journal of Conflict Resolutiotn, 12, 2 (June 1968), 235-41.

The behavior of three populations (mental patients, prisoners, and college students) was compared under cooperative and competitive conditions. For the first 24 trials, all subjects were exposed to a 50 percent cooperative program. The program then shifted so that half of the subjects played against an 80 percent cooperative program while the other half played against an 80 percent competitive program. Although personality differences were evident on the first trial, personality alone was not found to be a reliable predictor of behavior. When the amount of

programmed cooperativeness is controlled, however, personality exerts a systematic influence upon game behavior.

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Estudios Internacionales Revista del Instituto de Estudios Internacionales de la Universidad de Chile Volumen 2 Numero 1 Abril-Junio 1968

Amilcar Herrera Una politica de desarrollo cientifico para America latina

Jorge Sabato El desarrollo de la ciencia at6mica en Argentina

Albert 0. Hirschman Obstaculos a la percepci6n del cambio en los paises en vias de desarrollo

Roman Kolkowicz Una herejia santificada: idea y realidad del ejercito rojo

John Gittings El ejercito chino y la revoluci6n cultural

Alain Joxe Cohetes anti-cohetes: cregreso a estrategias defensivas?

Richard Gott La experiencia de Bolivia con la lucha guerrillera

PRESIO: US$ 1.50 por cada ejemplar, US$ 6.00 anualmente

Dirigirse A: Departamento de Subscripciones, Estudios Internacionales, Casilla 14187, Correo 15, Santiago De Chile

COMPARATIVE STUDIES IN SOCIETY AND HISTORY

An International Quarterly CONTENTS OF VOLUME X. No. 4 (JULY 1968)

Patronage and Parties in Political Structure ALEX WEINGROD -..--------------------- Patrons, Patronage and Political Parties

GEORGE MACKLIN WILSON ------..-------- A New Look at the Problem of "Japanese Fascism"

Social Tensions CHANDRA JAYAWARDENA ----------------.-- Ideology and Conflict in Lower Class Communities

P. BISKUP ------------------------ White-Aboriginal Relations in Western Australia: An Overview

Urban Power DAVID M. NICHOLAS --------------------------- Town and Countryside: Social and Economic

Tensions in Fourteenth-Century Flanders

Review Articles: Two Views of Swanson's Religion and Regime WILLIAM J. BOUWSMA ------------------ ----------- ..' Swanson's Reformation

JOHN T. FLINT ------------------------------- A Handbook for Historical Sociologists

Subject Index, Volume X

(Any article that is not in itself comparative will be followed by another setting its subject in comparative perspective. )

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THE JOURNAL OF CONFLICT RESOLUTION Statement of Purpose and Style Requirements

THE JOURNAL OF CONFLICT RESOLUTION is designed to stimulate and communicate sys- tematic research and thinking on international processes, including the total international sys- tem, the interactions among governments and among nationals of different states, and the processes by which nations make and execute their foreign policies. It is our hope that theo- retical and empirical efforts in this area will help in minimizing the use of violence in resolv- ing international conflicts.

The editors believe that concepts, data, and methods from all of the social and behavioral sciences are needed for the understanding of problems in this field and for the development of a systematic body of knowledge. Moreover, we believe that relevant insights can be derived from analyses of interaction and conflict, not only directly at the international level, but also at other levels of social organization. We there- fore welcome submission of manuscripts rele- vant to conflict and its resolution, regardless of their disciplinary orientation, their level of analysis, their theoretical approach, or the type of research methods used. The JOURNAL pub- lishes a wide variety of articles-including re- ports of empirical research (basic or applied), theoretical analyses, critical reviews, as well as speculative or programmatic papers with a sys- tematic focus.

Form and Style for Submission of Manuscripts

In order to standardize and facilitate han- dling of manuscripts, authors are asked to ob- serve the following procedures in submitting materials to THE JOURNAL OF CONFLICT RESO- LUTION.

Manuscripts must be typed with a dark, black ribbon (electric typewriter preferred), clearly mimeographed, or multilithed. Do not use ditto. A minimum of corrections may be made in dark ink, but the typesetter should not be expected to piece the manuscript together. Submit three copies of the manuscript.

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after the text. References should be alphabetized and submitted in one of the following forms: DEUTSCH, KARL W. et al. Political Com-

munity and the North Atlantic Area. Prince- ton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1957.

KELMAN, HERBERT C. "Internationalizing Mili- tary Force." In Q. WRIGHT, W. M. EVANS, and MORTON DEUTSCH (eds.), Preventing World War III: Some Proposals. New York: Simon & Schuster, Inc., 1962.

NASH, J. F. "Noncooperative Games," Annals of Mathematics, 54 (1951), 286-95.

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Figures should be submitted in their final form, for photographing. Use India ink and place them on separate pages in a separate sec- tion at the end of the manuscript following the tables. Indicate where they belong in the text in the same way as tables are indicated.

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