No CrossRef data available.
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 October 2022
1. For examples of current literature, see The Americas in 1984, A Year for Decisions: Report of the Inter-American Dialogue (Washington: Aspen Institute for Humanistic Studies, 1984); Phillip Berryman, What's Wrong in Central America (Philadelphia: American Friends Service Committee, 1984); Central America: Anatomy of a Conflict, edited by Robert S. Leiken (New York: Pergamon, 1984); The Future of Conflict in the 1980s, edited by William J. Taylor (Washington: Georgetown University, Center for Strategic and International Studies, 1982); Jonathan Alford, “Confidence-Building Measures,” Adelphi Papers 149 (London: International Institute for Strategic Studies, 1979); Falk Bomsford, “The Confidence-Building Measure Offensive in the United Nations,” Aussenpolitik 4 (1982):370–90; Chester L. Brown, “Latin American Arms: For War?,” Inter-American Economic Affairs 37 (Summer 1983):61–66; Ronald L. Slaughter, “The Politics and Nature of the Conventional Arms Transfer Process during a Military Engagement: The Falklands-Malvinas Case,” Arms Control 4 (May 1983):16–30.
2. See Morris and Millan, chap. 5; CIESUL, 91–97, 150; and Pierre, 293–95.
3. Report of the Inter-American Dialogue; Alvaro Echeverría Zuno, Centroamérica: la guerra de Reagan (Mexico: El Día, 1983); Leiken, Central America; Bomsford, “The CBM Offensive;” Toward Peace and Security in the Caribbean and Central America, International Peace Academy Report no. 16 (New York: International Peace Academy, 1983), and Maintenance of Peace and Security in the Caribbean and Central America, International Peace Academy Report no. 18.
4. Report of the Inter-American Dialogue, 51–53.
5. International Peace Academy Reports nos. 16 and 18; and Summary Report of Regional Cooperation in Peace and Security in Central America and the Caribbean (New York: International Peace Academy, 1984).