رسته‌ها
A Dictionary of Diplomacy
امتیاز دهید
5 / 4.8
با 12 رای
امتیاز دهید
5 / 4.8
با 12 رای
by: G. R. Berridge & Alan James

Peaceful contacts between independent groups have always, since the start of
human time, required the kind of representational activity which has come to
be known as diplomacy. In its modern form – that is, throughout the last halfmillennium
or so – diplomacy has retained a broadly constant character and
given rise to a burgeoning diplomatic profession. Like all professions, it has
spawned its own terminology and categories; and inasmuch as its activity concerned
relations between proud and jealous sovereigns, later replaced by no
less proud and jealous sovereign states, diplomatic language has been finely
honed and carries very precise meanings. It also bears the marks of having
found expression in the languages of civilizations beyond those of the West.
Furthermore – and again accentuated by the very sensitive nature of this particular
representational task – issues of protocol and precedence have been of
considerable significance, and have made their distinctive contribution to
diplomatic terms. Thus it occasions no surprise at all that diplomacy has, over
the centuries, developed a lexicon of specialized words and of other technical
usages which it necessarily employs. And as diplomats routinely deal not just
with matters of policy but also with the many legal issues which arise between
states, these aspects of their work have also made their marks in the diplomatic
vocabulary.
بیشتر
در کشور شما در دسترس نیست
اطلاعات نسخه الکترونیکی
آپلود شده توسط:
gamalo
gamalo
1394/04/21

کتاب‌های مرتبط

درج دیدگاه مختص اعضا است! برای ورود به حساب خود اینجا و برای عضویت اینجا کلیک کنید.

دیدگاه‌های کتاب الکترونیکی A Dictionary of Diplomacy

تعداد دیدگاه‌ها:
1

Peaceful contacts between independent groups have always, since the start of
human time, required the kind of representational activity which has come to
be known as diplomacy. In its modern form – that is, throughout the last halfmillennium
or so – diplomacy has retained a broadly constant character and
given rise to a burgeoning diplomatic profession. Like all professions, it has
spawned its own terminology and categories; and inasmuch as its activity concerned
relations between proud and jealous sovereigns, later replaced by no
less proud and jealous sovereign states, diplomatic language has been finely
honed and carries very precise meanings. It also bears the marks of having
found expression in the languages of civilizations beyond those of the West.
Furthermore – and again accentuated by the very sensitive nature of this particular
representational task – issues of protocol and precedence have been of
considerable significance, and have made their distinctive contribution to
diplomatic terms. Thus it occasions no surprise at all that diplomacy has, over
the centuries, developed a lexicon of specialized words and of other technical
usages which it necessarily employs. And as diplomats routinely deal not just
with matters of policy but also with the many legal issues which arise between
states, these aspects of their work have also made their marks in the diplomatic
vocabulary.
A Dictionary of Diplomacy
عضو نیستید؟
ثبت نام در کتابناک